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Jason Roy runs riot again as England go 4-0 up over Australia

England chase down their second-highest total batting second, thanks to a solid opening partnership of 174 by Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow; pacers Mark Wood and David Willey impress with the ball

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England's Jason Roy (R) celebrates his century during the fourth One Day International (ODI) cricket match between England and Australia at The Riverside in Chester-le-Street. Pic/AFP

England's Jason Roy (R) celebrates his century during the fourth One Day International (ODI) cricket match between England and Australia at The Riverside in Chester-le-Street. Pic/AFP

Jason Roy scored his second hundred of the series as England beat Australia by six wickets at Chester-le-Street on Thursday to move within one win of the first-ever 5-0 one-day international clean sweep of their arch-rivals. England, fresh from their 481 for six -- the highest men's ODI total of all time -- in a crushing 242-run win at Trent Bridge on Tuesday, 'only' needed 311 at the Riverside. But what was still England's second-highest total batting second to win a match at this level, behind their 350 for three against New Zealand at Trent Bridge three years ago, was made to look insignificant as in-form openers Roy (101) and Jonny Bairstow (79) put on 174. "I'm trying to control my innings, pace it so I can set some good foundations for the end," Roy told Sky Sports. "Unfortunately I couldn't kick on today."

'Solid cricket'
England finished on 314 for four, with Jos Buttler 54 not out, as they won with 32 balls to spare. "We played pretty solid cricket," said England captain Eoin Morgan. England, the world's top-ranked side in this format, will now look to surpass their previous best ODI series result against world champions Australia -- 4-0, including a washout, in a five-match home campaign in 2012 -- at Old Trafford on Sunday. This was Australia's 15th defeat in 17 completed ODIs as once again a side missing six first-choice players in banned star batsmen Steve Smith and David Warner, as well as injured quicks Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood and sidelined all-rounder Mitchell Marsh, failed to truly extend 2019 World Cup hosts England. "We were 30 or 40 short in the end," said Tim Paine, the Australia captain.

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