England 312 for 5 (Brook 87, Duckett 63, Livingstone 62*) beat Australia 126 (Potts 4-38, Carse 3-36) by 186 runs
England produced an electric all-round display to set up a series decider at Bristol on Sunday, as they thrashed Australia by 186 runs at Lord's. Harry Brook's sublime 87 formed the backbone of the innings which was capped off by the thunderous hitting of Liam Livingstone in a ground-record 25-ball half-century. Jofra Archer then briefly rekindled memories of 2019 with the best spell of his latest comeback, while Matthew Potts bagged a career-best 4 for 38 in an overwhelming performance.
Harking back to last year's dramatic Ashes Test, there was also, briefly, a moment with an Australian wicketkeeper in the spotlight. On 17, Brook glanced Mitchell Starc down the leg side and was given out but queried whether the catch had carried to Josh Inglis, who had been recalled to the side after injury. The replays showed the ball pitching just before his gloves. The crowd booed as the pictures came on the big screen, accompanied by a few chants of 'same old Aussies, always cheating', but it was a tame interlude compared to 2023.
Following his maiden ODI hundred in Durham, Brook cruised to a 37-ball fifty, adding 79 in 53 balls for the third wicket with Ben Duckett and 75 in 47 with Jamie Smith for the fourth, as England went through the gears in a game cut to 39 overs by heavy morning rain. Livingstone produced a grandstand finish to the innings with a mighty display of striking, including four sixes off the last over bowled by Starc, whose 28 runs conceded amounted to the most expensive over by an Australian bowler in men's ODIs. England amassed 156 off their last 15 overs.
Travis Head and Mitchell Marsh gave the daunting chase a promising start - Head launching a gigantic pull out of the ground over the Tavern Stand - and after the eight-over powerplay Australia were 66 without loss compared to England's 34 without loss. Overall, the 16 sixes hit in the match was a record for a Lord's ODI. However, sustaining the tempo was a tall order. Head swung across the line at Brydon Carse and Steven Smith edged an ugly charge at Potts.
Then Archer produced something special. An off-cutter at 88.2mph initially shaped in at Marsh before straightening to beat the edge and clatter off stump. It was a gem of a delivery to give Archer his first Lord's wicket since 2019 and he rightly wheeled away in celebration. When his next ball clattered into the forearm of Marnus Labuschagne, the 2019 flashbacks were in full flow, albeit in coloured clothes, and Archer also added Glenn Maxwell during Australia's collapse
Before long, however, his ball to Marsh had a contender for delivery of the game (or series) when Carse found an unplayable offering to flatten Labuschagne's off stump. It was a collective effort from England's quicks who shared nine wickets - Potts taking three wickets in four balls to rush through the lower order - before Adil Rashid finished things off.
Under heavy cloud, the ball nipped around early after England had been put into bat. Phil Salt fell shortly after the powerplay, skewing the excellent Josh Hazlewood to backward point, and Will Jacks picked out the same fielder to give Marsh a wicket in his second over - the first he had bowled since April 3. On a day when Cameron Green was revealed to have a back injury, it was not insignificant that Marsh was back with the ball.
Brook initially appeared to be playing a different game to the other batters, as he skipped out of the blocks with three leg-side boundaries prior to his near-dismissal, and England's momentum built around him. Sean Abbott's expensive series continued - by the end of the innings his combined figures for three outings were 19.4-0-165-0 - while both Brook and Duckett took on Adam Zampa as well as the other overs of spin from Maxwell and Labuschagne.
Duckett, who had offered a tough return catch to Starc before scoring, sent Zampa over long-on for six before moving to a hard-working 51-ball half-century one ball later, before top-edging the legspinner to deep backward square. Smith continued the aggressive approach against Zampa, sending him over wide long-on, and Brook added a second six in the same over to deep midwicket. The 12 overs of spin went for 106.
A moment of absent-mindedness nearly did for Smith when he only just avoided being run out when he didn't run his bat in at the non-striker's end, although the ball ended up costing Australia six runs as the deflection went to the rope. By then, Brook was challenging for England's fastest ODI hundred at Lord's - 61 balls by Jos Buttler - but picked out long-on as Zampa ended his stay from his 58th.
Smith fell in the next over, slicing Maxwell to short third, but any concerns the innings may limp to a finish vanished as Livingstone provided stunning late power. A huge blow over midwicket off Hazlewood was followed by the dismantling of Starc's figures, including two sixes into the pavilion, to the increasingly joyous roars of a large crowd. Unlike last summer, an England-Australia series goes to the final game 2-2, although the weather in Bristol may yet have the final say.