Archive for New Zealand
Another upset targeted by Taylor
Posted by: | CommentsSouth Africa didn’t play a bunch of dummies who had to just turn up in Dhaka and watch Graeme Smith’s men crumble from a vantage point.
South Africa kept their record ongoing as they failed to pass their knockout test again. It was really depressing for the S.A fans as it was one of the undesirable fallouts of South Africa’s exit from the world cup. Jesse Ryder showed how good a batsman can be. New Zealand players were team possessed they had given all over performance in fielding, batting, and bowling. They never wanted to go home and also wanted to settle a score with the ground that gave them the lowest low as they are not bunch of dummies.
Quietly they have slipped into Sri Lanka, warmer than Dhaka, not as hot as Mumbai, facing a far tougher task than the one they accomplished in Dhaka, that of beating a team much more naturally talented, much more varied, playing in home conditions, used to conditions warmer than Dhaka but not as hot as Mumbai.
And it’s staying under the radar that they are hanging on to. Most of the time New Zealand play we are underdogs, Ross Taylor, who has captained New Zealand in some of the games this World Cup, said two days before their sixth semi-final in 10 World Cups. It’s something we almost enjoy, and we expect when we play. I know a lot of teams expect to beat us, and we enjoy the underdog tag, and we expect to beat them as well.
New Zealand have played Sri Lanka before in this tournament, and the result was not too encouraging, a defeat by 112 runs at a ground these teams will be fighting for the right to play at. Taylor sees having played Sri Lanka as an
advantage, as an opportunity to have made the mistakes in a game not so big.
ICC fine completes miserable day for Kiwi bowler
Posted by: | CommentsDue to an injury to his left quadricep New Zealand seam bowler Kyle Mills has been ruled out of the rest of the World Cup. Mills was injured during the group-stage victory over Canada two weeks ago and has struggled to regain full fitness since, missing Friday’s quarter-final victory over South Africa.
Andy McKay has been named as Mills’ replacement in the squad following approval from the International Cricket Council.
The left-armer has played in 13 one-day internationals for the Black Caps and is expected to join up with the rest of the team on Sunday.
Meanwhile, Mills and his captain Daniel Vettori have been fined for breaching the ICC Code of Conduct during the victory over South Africa.
Proteas batsman Francois du Plessis was also penalised, with the punishments a result of an altercation between himself and the Black Caps players following the dismissal of AB de Villiers
New Zealand’s stunning upset, Oram leads
Posted by: | CommentsSouth Africa were cruising at 108 for 2 in the 25th over when Jacques Kallis fell and they crash-landed spectacularly to be shot out for 172. The self-destructive streak, demonically masochistic in nature, will perhaps need shrinks to decode it. Once they realised their opponents were cracking under pressure, New Zealand went for the kill with close-in fielders and disciplined bowling, led by Jacob Oram who took four wickets and a great catch.
The pitch was slow but there was no sharp turn; the bowlers were disciplined but there was no sensational game-breaking spell; none of the three spinners got much purchase from the wicket; and the total was below par; but for some reason South Africa were feeling extremely claustrophobic. Even when Kallis fell – to a blinder of a catch from Jacob Oram, rushing to his left at deep midwicket – there wasn’t much to suggest that this could turn into another contender for all-time greatest choke in World Cup history.
Their nerves were best represented by the dismissal of JP Duminy, to open the choke gates who played an awful shot. Nathan McCullum slowed up the pace on a delivery that landed on a length, outside off, and Duminy went so hard into an ugly cut that he ended up dragging the ball on to his stumps. With Duminy’s fall, South Africa were in a spot of bother at 121 for 4, in the 28th over, and the first signs of something special loomed over Mirpur.
Next over wa another heartbreak. Faf du Plessis hit straight to midwicket and ran like a headless chicken. AB de Villiers should perhaps have refused that call but he responded, only to find himself well short of the crease. It was at this moment that New Zealand really sensed that this could be their night.
The moment was so intense that even Daniel Vettori, not known for sledging, gave some lip to du Plessis and Kyle Mills, who had carried drinks on to the field at the fall of de Villiers, got into the act. A visibly agitated du Plessis shoved Mills, the departing de Villiers returned to support his partner, and eventually the umpires had to get involved. New Zealand’s players swooped in to the crime scene and it was a classic Youtube moment. You could almost feel the pressure-cooker situation out there.
New Zealand attacked with close-in men, ready to sledge and eager to pile on the pressure, and Johan Botha cracked in the 33rd over. It was a legcutter from Oram and Botha played down the wrong line to lose his off stump. Oram, who was the man who started it all with that Kallis catch, wasn’t done yet. In the 35th over, he lured Robin Peterson into edging an attempted cut to the keeper and South Africa were swaying away like drunken men at 132 for 7. South Africa’s nerves were frayed further when Dale Steyn square drove Nathan McCullum in the air to backward point, where who else but Oram accepted the offering.
If Oram was the man in the forefront of New Zealand’s resurgence, du Plessis was the man seeking redemption for making that wrong call that led to the run out of de Villiers. In his brief international career, he has already shown a tenacity to remain relatively calm under pressure. And he wasn’t ready to throw in the towel. He was on 14 when Steyn fell, and he took ownership of the chase. He rushed down the track to slam Tim Southee to the straight boundary in the 40th over, on drove Vettori to collect another four in the 41st, and even lifted Oram for a thrilling six over long-off in the 43rd over.
In the same over that the game turned for one last time, and it was also an over that captured the entire madness of the evening. du Plessis had crashed the first delivery of the over back at Oram who couldn’t hold on to a very difficult chance, and once the six was hit, one had to ask the question: was the night turning for Oram? Was it swinging towards du Plessis? But du Plessis sliced the fifth ball straight to extra cover and South Africa had well and truly sunk into oblivion.
South Africa started the day strong , they attacked with spin and seam, shuffled their bowlers regularly like a pack of cards, and hustled on the field to keep a tight leash on New Zealand. Jesse Ryder and Ross Taylor were at the forefront of a revival from the depths of 16 for 2; carefully, almost mindful of a potential lower-order collapse on this pitch, Ryder and Taylor battled through. The odd boundary signalled growing comfort, but they never broke away decisively. A nervy equilibrium had been reached by the end of the 30th over with New Zealand reaching 112 for 2 and the game was waiting to be seized.
However, both Ryder and Taylor departed in quick succession but Kane Williamson made a vital 38 to push New Zealand to 221.
Sri Lanka will stay at second
Posted by: | CommentsComing into the tournament as one of the favourites, Sri Lanka have not quite convinced so far and but for their three most experienced players might have struggled again. Instead the finish was the kind of one-sided result that has epitomised Group A.
Sri Lanka’s old guard combined to ease to a 112-run victory over New Zealand at the Wankhede Stadium. Kumar Sangakkara made his first ODI century since June 2008, supported by a controversial 66 from Mahela Jayawardene to haul Sri Lanka up to 265 before Muttiah Muralitharan spun New Zealand to defeat with 4 for 25.
New Zealand, though, will rue their misfortune when Jayawardene was reprieved at a critical moment. Sri Lanka had lost both openers and were struggling to get on top of the New Zealand slow bowlers when, in the 24th over, Jayawardene chipped a return catch to Nathan McCullum.
It went low to McCullum’s right and the bowler dived full-length to scoop the ball centimetres off the turf. The batsman stood his ground and the decision was sent upstairs. Side-on replays seemed to clearly show McCullum’s fingers under the ball but a front-on shot, as it so often does, created doubt that the third umpire, Amiesh Saheba, ruled on. Before then Jayawardene had scrambled for 50 deliveries to make 26 but silkily added a further 40 at a run a ball and Sri Lanka never looked back.
A doosra took care of Kane Williamson for 5 before he landed the killer blow by spinning one back into Taylor’s pads. Despite a big stride and a review, Taylor was rightly given out for 33 and his team never looked like competing. Scott Styris chipped a return catch to Muralitharan, who belied his injury to spring up and snaffle the chance, and Nathan McCullum and James Franklin soon followed. Between them Mendis and Muralitharan took six wickets for 59 in 14 overs.
Unlike the frenzied excitement in Group B, the qualifiers in Group A are already settled. Sri Lanka are guaranteed to finish second whatever happens between Australia and Pakistan, which might well leave them in line for a contest against the World Cup mysterybox, England, in the quarter finals.
Anxious times for Vettori Taylor reports all-rounder needs up to a fortnight to recover
Posted by: | CommentsNew Zealand is unsure whether Daniel Vettori will be fit for their Group A clash with Sri Lanka on Friday. The Black Caps captain’s World Cup hopes were under threat when he injured knee ligaments attempting to take a catch in the win over Pakistan.
The all-rounder was given good news after a scan and had hoped to shake off the problem in time for the final pool game on March 18.
But stand-in skipper Ross Taylor believes Vettori could miss the Mumbai fixture, as well as Sunday’s match against Canada.
Vettori’s absence means Luke Woodcock and Hamish Bennett will battle it out for a starting place against the Canadians and could be in line to play against Sri Lanka.
Skipper suffered right knee injury during Pakistan victory
Posted by: | CommentsVettori fell awkwardly while diving forward in an unsuccessful attempt to catch Kamran Akmal’s spooned drive in the sixth over of Pakistan’s pursuit of a victory target of 303 in Pallekele.
New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori limped out of his side’s 110-run success over Pakistan after injuring his right knee. He was helped to his feet and continued for two further balls before going off to receive ice treatment on the knee.
New Zealand team media manager Ellery Tappin said Vettori’s injury is being assessed and at the moment and can’t comment further. Victory over Pakistan moved the Black Caps top of Group A and they are next in action against Canada in Mumbai n March 13.
Tim Southee picked up 3-25 as Pakistan were bowled out for 192 in reply and Taylor credited his bowlers – Kyle Mills, Nathan McCullum and Scott Styris each took two wickets for the pleasing result that gave him a 27th birthday to remember.
Pakistan captain Shahid Afridi, meanwhile, regretted his side’s failure in all departments of the game and hoped for a better performance in the remaining matches.
Batsman’s late surge sets up 110-run win for New Zealand
Posted by: | CommentsShahid Afridi’s men came into the match the first of the tournament to be held at Kandy’s recently built Pallekele International Stadium on the back of three straight wins to open their Group A campaign. And all appeared to again be going to plan as New Zealand were restricted to 210-6 with four overs of their innings remaining. Pakistan’s promising start to the World Cup was brought to a shuddering halt by New Zealand, who prevailed by 110 runs thanks to a brutal Ross Taylor century.
At that point Taylor, having been reprieved on nought and eight by wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal, had scored 76 off 111 balls – but he then went into overdrive as the Black Caps plundered an incredible 92 runs from the remaining 24 deliveries.
Veteran seamers Shoaib Akhtar (1-70) and Abdul Razzaq (0-49) came in for particularly harsh punishment, albeit neither helped their own cause by serving up a succession of full tosses for Taylor to dispatch over the leg-side.
Taylor, the most recent of whose three previous one-day tons came in October 2008, finished on a career-best 131 not out from 124 balls, including eight fours and seven sixes – a fine way to celebrate his 27th birthday.
Australia win over Kiwis
Posted by: | CommentsMitchell Johnson bowled brilliantly taking four wickets for 33 runs in his 9.1 overs. Shaun Tait sent three top order batsmen back to the pavilion giving away 35 runs in his seven overs.
Australia registered their second consecutive win in the ICC World Cup thrashing the neighbours New Zealand by seven wickets as Shane Watson and Brad Haddin provided a solid opening partnership hitting half centuries at Vidarbha Cricket Ground, Nagpur on Friday.
Australia made mincemeat of the target of 207 runs set by the Kiwis. They achieve it in the 35th overs. Australia was also helped by 32 runs by Mr. Extras. New Zealand bowlers bowled 29 wides.
New Zealand soon realized that what it takes playing against Australia. While the Black Caps demolished Kenya in their first match by ten wickets as the Kenyans were bundled out for a meager 69.
New Zealand took 18.1 overs to get the first wicket. Haddin hit 62 runs in 61 balls with one six and six fours. Shane Watson fell in the same over. Watson made 55 in 50 balls hitting eight fours. Both wickets were taken by Hamish Bennet.
Nathan McCullum and the skipper Daniel Vettori did the damage control very well but that was not enough. Nathan played 76 balls for his 52 runs hitting just three fours. Vettori played a bit faster making 44 runs in 43 balls with five fours.
Kenya crushed by the black caps
Posted by: | CommentsNew Zealand wasted little time in rattling off the required runs. The Group A match scheduled for 100 overs lasted less than 32 as the Black Caps dismissed Kenya for 69 and knocked off the runs in just 48 balls.
New Zealand made embarrassingly short work of Kenya in their World Cup opener in Chennai, winning by 10 wickets. The African side was never at the races and lost their last nine wickets for 29 in the face of some impressive seam bowling.
Hamish Bennett was the pick of the bowlers – his 4-16 featuring the spectacular wicket of veteran Steve Tikolo, who was left with one stump standing after missing a straight one.
Jacob Oram (3-2) and Tim Southee (3-13) shared the other six wickets equally, the former finishing things off by removing Elijah Otieno.
Brendon McCullum and Martin Guptill rattled to the target in double-quick time, half of their 72-0 coming in boundaries.
Kenya got off to a dismal start, losing five wickets inside the first 16 overs with paceman Bennett doing the bulk of the damage.
The 23-year-old, who was introduced as first change in the 10th over, claimed four wickets in his fiery opening spell after Southee had sent back opener Alex Obanda (six) early on.
From 40-1 in the 12th over, the minnows slumped to 49-5, with Seren Waters (16), Collins Obuya (14), Steve Tikolo (two) and wicketkeeper Maurice Ouma back in the pavilion after failing to stand up to Bennett’s pace. He got three of his four victims lbw as he stuck to an impeccable line during his opening spell which cost just 15 runs.
Oram then took over and claimed Jimmy Kamande (two) to leave Kenya tottering on 59-6. He struck again in his next over when Thomas Odoyo found his leading edge caught at point by Jesse Ryder. Southee then polished off the tail, dismissing Nehemiah Odhiambo and Shem Ngoche in successive balls while Oram sent back number eleven Elijah Otieno. Guptill (39no) began the chase aggressively and hit five boundaries and two sixes, while McCullum (26no) finished the match with two reverse-sweep boundaries to seal a simple win.
