Mercury (Hobart)

D’ARCY DEMOLITION

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AUSTRALIA pulled off the highest run chase in a Twenty20 internatio­nal to claim a dramatic five-wicket victory over New Zealand in their triseries clash in Auckland yesterday.

Set a mammoth 244 to win at Eden Park, the visitors achieved their target with seven balls to spare as David Warner (59 off 24 balls) and D’Arcy Short (76 off 44) ran riot.

Warner ended his whiteball form slump in emphatic fashion, smashing five sixes, while Short notched his maiden 50 in his fourth T20 internatio­nal.

In a tense ending to the high-scoring extravagan­za, Marcus Stoinis was run out at the nonstriker’s end in the second-last over before Aaron Finch sealed victory with a six.

All up, 32 sixes were scored across both innings in what Australian paceman Kane Richardson described as a win for the ages.

“Twelve an over for the whole game, two a ball for the whole game — that’s unbelievab­le,” Richardson said. “And to do it with seven balls to spare, that’s an amazing effort. That’s one of the great games.”

The result leaves New Zealand needing to defeat England tomorrow in Hamilton to secure a rematch against Australia in Wednesday night’s final at the same venue.

Black Caps opener Martin Guptill earlier scored an astonishin­g century to leave Australia staring down the barrel of defeat after conceding its worst T20 bowling performanc­e.

Guptill blasted nine sixes on his way to a T20 career-high 105 off 54 balls, taking full advantage of Eden Park’s short boundaries to set up an imposing total of 6-243.

Guptill received handshakes from the Australian­s and a rave reception from a packed home crowd when he departed, caught by Glenn Maxwell off Andrew Tye’s bowling.

The 31-year-old overtook retired compatriot Brendon McCullum as the highest T20 scorer with 2188 runs.

“It’s a funny old feeling,” Guptill said.

“To put 240 on the board and lose the game is a little bit dishearten­ing ... if you said at the start of the day ‘ would you take a hundred?’ I’d say ‘yes please’.”

Fellow opener Colin Munro’s 76 off 33 balls was capped by the left-hander smashing Tye for three-consecutiv­e sixes.

Both Guptill and Munro targeted Eden Park’s notoriousl­y short straight boundaries with great success.

Tye (2-64), Stoinis (0-50), Richardson (2-40) and Billy Stanlake (1-43) all went at more than 10 runs an over, while Short gave up 19 runs in his first internatio­nal over.

Stanlake’s sole wicket came in bizarre circumstan­ces off a 142.2km/h bouncer that rocketed into Mark Chapman’s helmet, which fell off his head and onto the stumps.

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