West Indies vs Australia – Australia 190 for 7 (Cameron Green 51, Mitchell Owen 50, Motie 2-29, Holder 2-32, Joseph 2-39) beat West India (Chase 60, Hope 55, Dwarshuis 4-36) with three wickets
The beginning of Mitchell Owen’s dream with bats and balls, and the half-century of Cameron Green’s half-century sent Australia to win on three heels in western India after a workshop of demonstrations by Bendwarsh and Nathan Ellis, who played matches at Sabina Park.
Mitchell Owen won a key carrier in front of the club 50 and became the third Australian after Ricky Ponting and David Warner at 27 entered a half-century with a T20I start and player prices. He defeated six sixes, with Green fired five and two boundaries with 51 ballss and 51. Australia outside the Antilles victims destroyed 9 from 17.
Previously, Dwarshuis won four out of 36. Includes the past three. He and Ellis United scored seven runs on the final 16 balls of the West India tax, limiting it to 189 x 8 after a half-century of Roston Chase, and Shai Hope threatened to apply the massive and generic ones. Chase was 32 to 32 to 60 years old, while Hope was 55 out of 39. Simronhetmeyer also scored 38 out of 19, but the Antilles combined a low order at 11 as they lost 6 x 30 in the last five overs.
Without Evin Lewis, injured in the Antilles, the best new people have set up a great platform. Brandon King has moved from the cry of tests in T20 mode. He looked easy and hit four limits in the first three images as Quicks Australia missed the broad. The early introduction of Spin stopped the impulse when Cooper Konoli took the first T20I wicket with King exceeding one. Hope raises the stick and throws the konori over the rear leg cover.
West Indies vs Australia – Mitchell Owen, Cameron Green in the 50s puts Australia 1-0:
Chase’s first 10 balls were extremely lethargic, but he found his groove outside of the power play. He set up Connolly and Adam Zampa on his back and then on the 10th he found the border four times with four great strikes from Sean Ebbott. First of all, it’s fine before showing power and touching the same gap between the third short and the back, before playing a perfect, predictable straight ball again. West India seemed ready for a huge account of 123 people per person on the 13th.
Dwarshuis and Ellis Death Bowling Master Class:
Dwarshui begins to collapse the West India as Chase has been hiding for a long time, and tries to clean the ropes again. Nadezhda slowed considerably before Mitchell Owen had his first impact on T20I cricket with the ball, forcing the false hope with a big slow ball.
Hetmyer threatened to push West India over 200 and sucked Ellis’ first two balls with the 18th number on the ropes. But then West India lost four in seven of Sleeve’s final 16 balls. The 18th final four balls were a mixture of slow balls and great yokers. Dwarshui took three wickets in one race in 19th place, with three Mishas falling deep. Ellis closed his latest appreciation for Green. Green denied the hitmar with six of them with an incredible socket.
Fraser-Mcgurk is confused again:
An Australian farmer raised his eyebrows when he remembered Fraser McGurk in place of Spencer Johnson, who was influenced as Josh Inglis’ rescue wicket. But there was very little surprise when he fought with 2 by 7, before Jason Holder’s error in the middle.
Mitchell Marsh mixed three monster six with seven potential points in the mood “all or nothing” and then received a thin edge in Alzalie Joseph’s additional rhythm. He then took Joseph to the thin legs twice, finishing his power play.
Australia saw all sorts of issues, from the end of high Josh Inglis, Akell Hosin to the point where Glen Maxwell Skient had a score of 10.
Green and Mitchell Owen Power Australia Home, just
Although one person had little experience with the medium size finish as they took part in the game, the couple showed extraordinary self-control to steal the game from the Antilles. Mitchell Owen was intrepid, left the trail with six from Andre Russell and launched another later in the “clinker”. He then deposited Khosein three times on the 12th to dispel all the fears about his ability to the central Kabery.
Cameron Green plays very intelligently on the other side, reverses three doubles and isn’t without risk after a rapid departure on the board. He then pulled out the holder to motivate him, bringing Blaz up to 50-25 balls, delivering his target to 32-31 balls. However, he collapses and tries to hit the motor off the ground again.
Owen continued to leave and beat Joseph to reach 50 out of 26, but he fell to the next ball and tried to leave for Australia. However, Connolly, Dwarshuis and Abbott did enough to send visitors home, without the help of West India field players. Defender player Andrew’s defensive player launched Abbotta into the fine leg off to win. He was almost exhausted, but they took off at home with seven balls to get supplies.