Even in the first game against Australia, when he accelerated brilliantly to make 66, his early struggles seemed to force his team-mates to attack, with four of them being dismissed trying to force the pace as he ticked along.”It’s not something in my gameplan that I want to take five balls or 10 balls [to get going] – it’s just the way it happens,” Malan said. “You obviously go out and want to score as many runs as you can quickly.”My first three or four T20Is, I got off to really good starts. And when you bat at No. 3, you come in in different positions. You might come in in the first over or the fifth over. You might face a bowler in his second over when he’s in his rhythm.”There has been a lot written in the press about it, and it’s something I’ve spoken to Morgs about before this series. I said, ‘look, if there’s something you want me to do differently’. And he said: ‘the way you play is exactly how we want you to play – you just keep doing what you’re doing’.”The man that matters is Eoin Morgan, and if he’s happy with the way I’m approaching it, then that’s good enough for me at the moment. That doesn’t mean I’m not trying to improve on that – I always want to improve, so I can keep pushing a case to be in the starting XI.”Malan also revealed that he asked Morgan following the series in South Africa whether he would be better served by dropping down into the middle order when playing domestic T20 cricket, but suggested that he had no plans to do so for Yorkshire in the Blast or over the winter – including in a possible Big Bash stint.”He said: ‘that’s your choice, if you want to take a year out doing something out of your comfort zone but will risk you getting picked for England in the future’,” Malan said. “His words were, ‘if you keep doing what you’re doing and keep improving there’s no reason you can’t potentially slot into those positions’ – even though they see me as a top-four batter at the moment.”But with a number of left-handers – Ben Stokes, Moeen Ali, and Morgan himself – in those spots, it seems unlikely. Instead, it seems that Malan’s best chance remains as a top-three batsman, hoping that his ability against spin – honed on slow wickets in franchise tournaments – counts in his favour. He will continue at No. 3 in the final game of the series on Tuesday, with Tom Banton set to move up to open.”You go to Bangladesh and play on a wicket that’s a 200 wicket on the Monday and a 120 wicket on the Tuesday,” he said. “You are consistently learning how to adapt and read conditions which I think is one of my strengths in T20 cricket; that I can assess situations pretty quickly, when to go and when to sit back.”It’s a good learning curve going out there. If I am lucky enough to play well enough over the next year to get into the T20 World Cup squad, then I hope the experience I have playing in tournaments will put me in good stead.”

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