India v England: first men’s T20 cricket international – live

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4th over: England 35-2 (Buttler 29, Brook 0) Buttler clips Hardik through square leg for successive boundaries. Then he pushes a slower ball just short of the bowler, who collects and throws at the stumps. Buttler has to do the splits to ensure he’s in his crease and then falls over. The throw missed anyway.

England will want Buttler out there for as long as possible because he looks in great touch. He drags a short ball to the midwicket boundary then touches a loose delivery to fine leg for his fourth four of the over. Buttler has 29 from 16 balls.

“The mere mention of pan-generational talent Jasprit Bumrah reminded me of his current status as my very favourite opposition player,” says Tom Hopkins. “I find the man love is never stronger than for someone who you’ll only ever see as a neutral putting the hurt on your team. I was trying to work out my all-time, pan-sport number one in that respect. Virat was high on the list during his duels with Jimmy, going a bit further back Steve Waugh. Hang on, it’s obviously Gheorghe Hagi, isn’t it? Well always have USA ‘94.”

Does Richie Aprile count?

3rd over: England 17-2 (Buttler 12, Brook 0) Harry Brook is beaten by his first ball. Arshdeep is bowling majestically and has figures of 2-0-7-2.

WICKET! England 17-2 (Duckett c Rinku b Arshdeep 4)

Ben Duckett won’t be facing any more balls. He hit one boundary, an audacious reverse flick over short third, but sliced the next delivery – a nice outswinger from Arshdeep – high in the air. Rinku Singh ran back from cover to take a beautifully judged catch.

Ah. Ben Duckett is gone for 4.
Ah. Ben Duckett is gone for 4. Photograph: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

2nd over: England 12-1 (Duckett 0, Buttler 11) After seeing that first over, England will be relieved Mohammed Shami isn’t playing. In his absence the new ball is taken by Hardik Pandya. Buttler smacks his second ball down the ground for four and slices the fifth deliberately over backward point for another. A single allows him to keep strike. Ben Duckett hasn’t faced a ball yet.

“Speaking of generational talents,” says Kim Thonger, “how many England Test cricketers in the last 100 years can match what Tuffers has achieved with ball, bat, fag and beer can. OK, not with bat, and not all the time with ball. But still, with fag and beer can, not many.”

1st over: England 3-1 (Duckett 0, Buttler 2) A misfield allows Buttler to get off the mark with a couple. It was bounce that did for Salt but Arsheep got some extravagant sideways movement throughout the over. An outstanding start.

WICKET! England 0-1 (Salt c Samson b Arshdeep 0)

A tremendous start to the Bazball Nights era: Phil Salt has gone for a third-ball duck. He was surprised by some sharp bounce from Arshdeep, got in a horrible position and top-edged the simplest of catches to Sanju Samson. That was a pretty nasty delivery to face early on in any format, never mind when you are looking to attack.

Phil Salt
Phil Salt goes in the first over. Not a brilliant start from England. Photograph: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

The left-arm quick Arshdeep Singh, an outstanding bowler in this format, will take the first over.

Phil Salt and Ben Duckett are ready to go. It’s time for episode one of the ECB’s new spin-off, Bazball Nights.

In other news, India are without multi-generational multi-format talent Jasprit Bumrah because of injury. In fact only four of today’s XI started the T20 World Cup final last year: SKY, Axar Patel, Hardik Pandya and Arshdeep Singh. But India’s talent pool is among the deepest in cricket history (I was going to say the deepest and then I remembered the Australia A batting line-up of 1994-95), so don’t go betting the farm on England.

Pre-match reading

Tanya Aldred is a genius. You know it, I know it. This is the latest bit of proof.

“Hi Rob, looking forward to this,” says Luke Dealtry. “Of Luke Littler’s triumph, I think you wrote that he is a “multi-generational talent”. I’ve been wondering if this is mere hyperbole inflation or something worth exploring. Which cricketers are multi-generational as opposed to generational? Perhaps Don Bradman is the only ‘all-generational talent’ in sport. Please expand.”

Look, we live in a world where multiple Goats can apparently co-exist; I’m just trying to survive out there!

As with the phrase “world class”, I don’t really know the precise definition of “generational talent”. How can Phil Foden and Jude Bellingham both be generational talents? Doesn’t that just mean they’re really good?

It might, just might, be a load of pompous nonsense. And by using the phrase “multi-generational talent”, I might be the most pompous eejit of all. I always wanted to be the best in the world at something.

Team news

The great Mohammed Shami – who hasn’t played for India since the 2023 ODI World Cup final because of injury – was expected to return but he hasn’t maded the cut. England have gone with pace; India have three frontline spinners in Axar Patel, Varun Chakravarthy and Ravi Bishnoi.

India Abishek, Samson (wk), Tilak, Suryakumar (c), Hardik, Rinku, Reddy, Axar, Bishnoi, Varun, Ashdeep.

England Salt (wk), Duckett, Buttler (c), Brook, Livingstone, Bethell, J Overton, Atkinson, Archer, Rashid, Wood.

India win the toss and bowl

The Indian captain Suryakumar Yadav says the wicket looks a bit sticky. The dew should help the ball skid on when India bat. Jos Buttler would also have fielded first.

England named their team early, as is Baz’s wont. It’s seriously exciting – possibly a bit too exciting, because on a bad day that pace attack will go the distance.

Salt (wk), Duckett, Buttler (c), Brook, Livingstone, Bethell, J Overton, Atkinson, Archer, Rashid, Wood.

Taha Hashim's preview

There are so many brilliant young cricket writers and broadcasters around, and Taha is literally sitting at the top table.

India’s T20 squad is radically different to the names selected for the one-dayers, when the more storied names – Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, Jasprit Bumrah – return. But depth is rarely an issue here and Sharma and Kohli have been replaced with little trouble following their T20 retirements after the World Cup win last year in the Caribbean.

A fresh top three of Sanju Samson, Abhishek Sharma and Tilak Varma have six T20 international centuries between them in that period. They may even welcome the extra English pace at Eden Gardens, which hosted the highest successful T20 run chase last April, a Jonny Bairstow hundred helping Punjab Kings to score 262 with eight wickets to spare against Kolkata Knight Riders in the Indian Premier League.

India have won 13 out of 15 since lifting the trophy in Barbados, done with seven totals north of 200, including a staggering 297 for six in a 133-run win against Bangladesh in October. Those numbers are daunting, surely even for someone as relentlessly optimistic as McCullum.

Preamble

Buckle up, strap in, choose your own metaphor. Things are about to get lively. Three years ago, Brendon McCullum infused a woebegone England Test team with the spirit of white-ball cricket. Now he’s taking charge of the actual white-ball team. As spin-offs go, this could be anything from Frasier to Baywatch Nights. The only guarantee is that it won’t be dull.

This is the first of eight matches on England’s short tour of India: five T20s, three ODIs. The match begins at 1.30pm GMT, 7pm in Kolkata.

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