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Hales 171; England world record 444 for 3
- Updated: August 30, 2016
England 444 for 3 (Hales 171, Buttler 90*, Root 85, Morgan 57*) v PakistanLive scorecard and ball-by-ball details
England have produced some astonishing batting feats in one-day cricket over the last 18 months, but they surpassed even themselves at Trent Bridge as they plundered the highest total in ODI history.
Alex Hales surged to England’s highest ODI innings, finally knocking Robin Smith’s unbeaten 167 against Australia in 1993 off the top spot, while Jos Buttler hit England’s fastest fifty off 22 balls as they tallied a monstrous 444 for 3, when Buttler struck the final ball for four, to overtake Sri Lanka’s 443 for 9 against Netherlands.
Having passed Smith’s record in the 37th over, Hales was well on track for England’s first ODI double – and even a dip at Rohit Sharma’s record 264 – but he was lbw next ball for 171 off 122 deliveries to end a second-wicket stand of 248 with Joe Root. That, though, was far from the end of the mayhem.
Buttler, who holds the record for England’s fastest hundred, off 46 balls in Dubai last year, went to his fifty with four sixes in five balls off Shoaib Malik – for a period, his own record was in danger – while Eoin Morgan chipped in with a mere 24-ball effort as 240 runs came off the last 20 overs.
Pakistan were atrocious. Misfields abounded, chances went down – Hales was dropped on 114, Morgan on 14 – and Wahab Riaz twice took wickets off no-balls when Hales was caught at deep square-leg on 72 then Buttler was bowled late on. Wahab finished with none for 110, the second-most expensive ODI figures behind Mick Lewis from the famous Johannesburg ODI in 2006.
Hales came into …
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