Jos Buttler plays opener and finisher to keep debate about best role bubbling

England may have fewer options at finisher but Jos Buttler’s form as an opener makes him look irresistible

Matt Roller06-Sep-2020Opening the batting in T20 cricket usually involves a trade-off between scoring quickly and consistently; batsmen either look to fly out of the blocks and make the most of the hard new ball and the field restrictions, or get themselves set and take an innings deep.For most opening batsmen, it is a binary choice: Jason Roy, for example, chooses the former, while Babar Azam opts for the latter.But Jos Buttler is not like most opening batsmen. Since his promotion to the top of the Rajasthan Royals order in May 2018, Buttler has scored 1414 runs in 33 innings, averaging 47.13 while maintaining a strike rate of 153.86. No wonder so many of his team-mates refer to him as a “freak”.If that record isn’t enough in and of itself, consider this. Many astute analysts considered Sunil Narine’s promotion to open to be a seminal moment in how T20 cricket is played, such is the disregard he shows for protecting his wicket while swinging from the hip.And yet, since midway through the 2018 IPL, Buttler has kept pace with Narine, with his 153.86 strike rate only fractionally slower than Narine’s 154.57; meanwhile, Buttler’s average is nearly three times higher.