Star of 2016 tournament is paying price for lack of opportunities as power-game grows

Matt Roller13-Dec-2019

Joe Root kicks out in frustration after a low score for Sydney Thunder•Getty Images

“Oh yes, oh goodness” purred Pommie Mbangwa as Joe Root reverse-paddled an attempted yorker from Chris Morris over third man for six. “You’ve just got to appreciate the batsmanship these days. Who thinks to do that?”It was perhaps the best T20I innings ever played by an Englishman: in the cauldron of Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium, amid the pressure of a gargantuan 230 target in a do-or-die encounter with South Africa at the 2016 World T20, Root took only 44 balls to make a showpiece 83, exemplifying the combination of orthodoxy and innovation that secured him his place among the vanguard of modern batting talents.But since the final of that tournament (in which he scored another key half-century and also claimed two first-over wickets), Root has played only 23 T20s – approximately one every two months. There is little complicated about the diagnosis: as England’s Test captain and one of their few all-format players, Root simply hasn’t had time to keep up with a format that continues to evolve at startling pace.ALSO READ: Buttler, Stokes, Archer back for SA T20Is, no room for RootSince that tournament, Root has played 136 games of international cricket, more than anyone in the world except Virat Kohli. He has regularly reiterated his desire to play more and to improve, turning down the opportunity to be rested for the Trans-Tasman tri-series after the 2017-18 Ashes and even spending last winter eking out 99 runs in seven innings for Sydney Thunder.