Like Sri Lanka had chosen to field at Christchurch earlier in the day, England did the same at the MCG after winning the toss. Australia raced to 57 in the 8th over and then lost Warner and Watson off successive balls from Stuart Broad. In the 11th over, Chris Woakes accounted for Steven Smith and Eoin Morgan would have patted himself on the back for opting to field first. Earlier, Morgan saw Finch play nervously as an out-swinger from Anderson nearly took the edge of his bat and later when he flicked, Woakes misjudged a flier above his head. But England captain’s joy was short-lived as Finch blossomed into full bloom with passage of time. With George Bailey, Finch added 146 for fourth wicket and that partnership formed the backbone of Australian innings. Finch enjoyed the spell of spinner Joe Root, clubbed the bowler at will and reached his sixth ODI century off 102 balls. But this one proved far more valuable than his earlier five. England missed a chance to run out Finch, when the batsman was 123. Finally, it was a direct-throw run-out that ended Finch’s innings, when he had reached 135 off 128 balls with 12 fours and 3 sixes. After that Bailey fell for 55 as he played on to Steven Finn. But there was more help coming Australia’s way with Glenn Maxwell blasting 66 off 40, Marsh making 23 off 20 and Haddin complementing all that with a 14-ball 31. 342/9 at the end was too monumental for any team chasing victory in an ODI game and England were no exception.
Burdened by something insurmountable, England began slowly. Australia had a huge cushion but they didn’t relax. Instead, the two Mitchells, Starc and Marsh put the English batsmen under pressure and wickets started falling. By the 22nd over, 6 England batsmen had gone back to the pavilion. While the victory was already ruled out, reducing the margin of defeat was the least England could do. They had a lone ranger for this purpose. Standing amongst the dead, James Taylor held his gun and fought as much as he could do. But luck deserted England. When Taylor was 98, he tried to hit Josh Hazlewood on the legside and he was declared out lbw. On review, it transpired that the ball was missing the leg-stump. While Taylor escaped getting run-out, a scramble for a leg bye cost James Anderson’s wicket. Earlier, after Jos Buttler fell at 92, Taylor and Woakes added another 92 runs for the seventh wicket. But once Woakes got out, others followed him out of the ground. England could finally reach 231 all-out in the 42nd over and lost by 111 runs with James Taylor remaining not out on 98. England team’s current batting form looks like a reflection of Captain Morgan’s batting in the last five innings that reads 0, 2, 0, 0 and 0. He faced six balls before another duck was credited against him. While the batsmen disappointed, England’s bowling and fielding was no better. They need to seriously examine all these facets before going to Wellington for their second game against New Zealand on February 20, 2015.