England captain Jos Buttler congratulated Abhishek Sharma on his stunning 54-ball 135 in India's 150-run triumph in the fifth Twenty20 International in Mumbai. He described the record innings as one of the best examples of "clean ball striking."
With 13 sixes, the most by any Indian player in an innings, and the second-fastest T20I century by an Indian bat off 37 balls, Abhishek guided the hosts to 247 for nine.
In reply, England could only muster 97 runs, despite a fifty by Phil Salt. Mohammad Shami took 3 wickets, while Shivam Dube, Abhishek Sharma, and Varun Chakaravarthy took two wickets apiece. India won the 5th T20I by 150 runs and pocketed the series 4-1.
"Yeah, (we are) obviously disappointed (with the result), they (India) played a fantastic batting innings. I think credit to Abhishek Sharma, I thought that's as clean a ball striking as I've seen, I thought he played fantastically well," Buttler told the media after India recorded their second biggest T20I win by runs on Sunday.
Buttler indicated that his squad had only two options: go boom or bust. He denied England were "shell-shocked" by Abhishek's attack on his bowlers.
"We always sit down and think what more could we have done or how we could have stopped him, but some days I think you have to give a lot of credit to the opposition, I thought he played brilliantly well. Shell-shocked is not quite the word, I think. It can be difficult sometimes when a player gets on a roll and they play as well as he did," Buttler said.
"Looking back at the last IPL, he and Travis Head were the same at the top of the order for Sunrisers (Hyderabad) and obviously he's brought that into India. He (Abhishek) played a brilliant innings and sometimes you want to credit the opposition. You always think of what more could you do, how could we get him out, how could we slow him down and, but yeah, credit to us for, you know, sticking in there and fighting back and keeping them down to 240 after the start they got," Buttler said.
After England was bowled out for 97 and lost by 150 runs, their biggest loss in terms of runs in T20Is, the England captain admitted that the pitch was still the same for his batters.
"I've played in a few games like this and it generally goes one of two ways, you either get actually somewhere near or you fall in a heap and today was that day. The way Phil Salt went out there and struck the ball, it was obviously a really good wicket, you needed someone to go with him and one or two guys to catch fire and that's the way you're going to chase that down.
Like I said, you either get quite close in games like this and surprise yourselves or it doesn't work but, no, we certainly won't change the way we want to play. We need to, you know, keep backing that, be even more committed and you're desperate to do well and execute that," he said.
Buttler despite the 1-4 series loss to India, would not want England to alter their style of play.
"We've had our moments actually in all the games bar the first one probably and today. We had moments in Chennai, Pune, and obviously, the game we won in Rajkot. As we get more experienced, more committed to the style we want to play and the nuances of the game of how we're going to win those moments, then (we would) go on to win the match and win series," he added.
Varun Chakaravarthy, who won the Player of the Series for his 14 wickets, received praise from Jos Buttler as well.
"He's had a good series. He's been very accurate in his subtle variations and he's got a really good length, so he's done well," Buttler said.
The two teams will now clash in the first of the three ODIs in Nagpur on February 6.
(PTI inputs)