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England have lift-off, NZ want to ground them

A high benchmark was set by England in the opening match of the series but a young side is excited about trying for a repeat, however New Zealand are keen to show their response

Alex Hales and Jason Roy at training, Kia Oval, June 11, 2015

Alex Hales and Jason Roy were two batsman who did not contribute much at Edgbaston, which is a fact that excites Joe Root  •  PA Photos

Where does a sports team go after the perfect performance? Having reached the empyrean heights of scoring 400 in an ODI and then followed it by polishing New Zealand off to win by a record margin in the first game of the series, that is the question now facing England.
It seems an unlikely situation for them to be in, when you look back on a World Cup campaign that three months ago finished as one of their most abject. It would have taken a madman then to conceive of the feats inspired by Jos Buttler, Joe Root and Adil Rashid at Edgbaston on Tuesday. Such was the staggering audacity of England's display, and their subversion of type against a New Zealand side who are among the most aggressive in the 50-over game, that it was like imagining 1990s Wimbledon abandoning long-ball football to take the tiki-taka out of Lionel Messi's Barcelona.
A pessimist would say the only way is down from here but they are no longer admitted within the camp. This young England side, seemingly inspired by their dashing opponents in both Tests and ODIs, have demonstrated what they are capable of and are prepared to try and repeat the trick. "We've now done that, we know we can do it," Root said at The Oval, before asking himself the question: "Can we go and do it again on Friday?"
Seeing is believing, of course, and there can be few whose eyes weren't opened the other night. The first 400-plus score in England, featuring two of the four fastest one-day hundreds by Englishmen, ought to have inspired a few more believers, at a time when the game is seeking to re-establish its billing as one of the summer's big spectacles. Full houses for the second and third ODIs are expected, keen to study England's big bang theory.
The dual difficulty, as Root acknowledged, is now about how the team can achieve lift off again while at the same time keeping their feet on the ground.
"Obviously the way we played there was pretty much the perfect performance from our perspective," he said. "I suppose our challenge now is to try and do that more consistently. It's certainly something that we'll look to replicate on Friday, we don't know what the surface is going to be quite like yet but we'll go out there with a similar frame of mind to take on New Zealand. We're not naive enough to think they won't come back hard at us, because they're a great side."
Kane Williamson acknowledged that England had been "outstanding" at Edgbaston but said New Zealand hoped to be the aggressors once again when the teams meet on Friday, as they were during a messy Cake Tin meeting at the World Cup.
New Zealand's approach to the game has won them many new fans but, as shown in the Lord's Test last month or even the World Cup final, it is a combustible concoction and one that can leave the Black Caps with blackened faces. England may have some explosive material on their hands but they will have to be careful how they use it - though even spectacular failure would be preferable to the white flag the team has regularly flown in white-ball cricket.
"To a degree there can be some inconsistencies with an aggressive style of play but it's a very enjoyable style and it's one that pushes yourself and the team, and pushes boundaries to see how good you can be," Williamson said. "England certainly did that in the last match and we've been trying to do that for some time.
"It's about getting used to the style, if that's the plan of attack you want to take and getting comfortable with it so you can go out and be more consistent. With two teams looking to play aggressive cricket, there can be some one-sided games. But it's a style I'm sure everyone's enjoying watching. I suppose most teams in world cricket are looking to push the boundaries of one-day cricket."
That mindset was confirmed when Williamson said that the problems posed by chasing a 400-plus score were something New Zealand had "spoken a bit about". It has only been done once before, at altitude in Johannesburg, but it will surely happen again at some point.
For Root, who has now scored five one-day hundreds in little more than a year (leaving only six England batsmen above him), breaking through boundaries has become a regular occurrence. Such is his level of confidence that in the Oval nets he was attempting to reverse sweep fast bowling; his impudent grin while batting was as memorable as England's fresh dynamism at Edgbaston.
Even when they slipped to 202 for 6 after 30 overs, there was not so much a fear of failure as a fear of missing out. "It was exciting, it was great fun," Root said of the atmosphere in the dressing room as Buttler and Rashid set about New Zealand during a world-record stand of 177. "It was spectacular to watch, Jos almost made you feel like every ball was going to go out of the park."
At least for now, there is an intoxicating sense of possibility around England, though the inevitable failure to come (at some point) will test the faith. Something intangible has changed since the World Cup, it seems, though even Root is not sure what exactly.
"It is hard to put your finger on it but I'll tell you one thing that is really exciting, we've still got guys who didn't get off the ground the other day who are very explosive batters who can really take the game away from the opposition too. So I'm looking forward to them getting big scores later in the series."
It's too early to call England one-day perfectionists but it seems they are going to have a dip.

Alan Gardner is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @alanroderick