Image Source: Agencies
Britain captain Jos Buttler said he was "exhausted" with his sad run of structure and that the time had come to return to being "the player that I realize I'm" by setting up a strong execution with the bat.
The wicketkeeper player, who battled with the bat all through the ODI World Cup, scored his most memorable 50 years since September - - an unbeaten 58 off 45 balls to direct Britain to a series-evening out six-wicket triumph over has West Indies in the second ODI here on Wednesday.
"I've been looking for structure. I have had minutes where it has been disappointing," Buttler was cited as saying by the 'BBC'.
"I was getting tired of it so the time had come to place in a presentation and return to the player that I realize I'm," he added.
In front of the second ODI Buttler had been excused for five single digit scores in eight trips.
Be that as it may, the game dominating thump on Wednesday made him the fifth Britain player to cross the 5,000-run mark in ODIs.
"Truly satisfying. I've been playing for some time currently so it's extraordinary when you get to those achievements subsequent to playing for an extensive stretch of time. It's been a disappointing time as of late."
Buttler had assumed control over the reins as white-ball captain from World Cup-winning skipper Eoin Morgan last year.
Under his authority, Britain won the T20 World Cup a year ago.
Be that as it may, reigning champs Britain made a humiliating early exit from the ODI World Cup last month, completing seventh to simply meet all requirements for the 2025 Bosses Prize.
Leave a comment: (Your email will not be published)