How England turned the tables on spin bowling to establish a new ODI dominance

England’s white-ball revival since the 2015 has been startling to behold, and it has centred on the subversion of their oldest weakest of all

Andrew Fidel Fernando24-Oct-2018When England last toured Sri Lanka for ODIs, in 2014, their batsmen had essentially tripped over themselves in their attempts to defuse spin. By the final game of the seven-match series, captain Angelo Mathews could have packed his attack with spinners, set them loose inside the Powerplay, then slapped his hands over his eyes, and still soon found the England top order in a tangled, twitching heap in the middle of the pitch.Four years later, England have at times been imperious against slow bowling – fancy footwork, strapping sweeps, and fuss-free strike rotation characterising their batting, at least until after they had taken an unassailable 3-0 series lead. Even in the fifth ODI, in which England fielded a substantially depleted XI, it was the fast bowling of Dushmantha Chameera and Kasun Rajitha that derailed the visitors’ chase, though allsorts offspinner Akila Dananjaya would later claim a clutch of wickets.It turns out, however, that England haven’t merely been good against spin in Sri Lanka. In fact, in a matter of a few years, they have transformed themselves into one of the finest spin-playing ODI teams on the planet. Since May 2016, when England’s ODI form became truly monstrous – 12 out of 13 bilateral series won in that period (not counting the one-off Scotland game, which, you know, no one seems to) – they have averaged 56.44 against spin everywhere in the world. This is second only to India. As the graph below lays out, both teams are well ahead of the competition. Where England have been even better than India, though, is in run rate; no team comes close to their 5.91.