The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Anderson six blitz, 94 off 41, stuns Bangladesh

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

COREY ANDERSON made an unbeaten 94 from 41 balls and shared a 124-run partnershi­p with captain Kane Williamson, which guided New Zealand to 27-run win over Bangladesh Sunday and a 3-0 sweep of their Twenty20 cricket series.

The fourth wicket stand between Anderson and Williamson (60) allowed New Zealand to overcome a slow start and reach 194 for 4 after it was sent in, setting a challengin­g target for Bangladesh who were seeking their first win in New Zealand in six matches this summer. New Zealand previously won the three-match one-day internatio­nal series 3-0.

Bangladesh, in contrast, made a strong start and reached 89 for 2 after 10 overs where New Zealand had been 55 for 3. But the tourists weren’t able to quicken in the second half of their innings, finishing at 167 for 6.

The tourists were handicappe­d in their run chase by the loss of two players to injuries suffered in the field: opening batsman Imrul Kayes injured his knee tripping over an advertisin­g hoarding while attempting a catch and captain Masrafe Mortaza will have scans on an injured thumb.

After once again laying the foundation for their first victory in New Zealand, Bangladesh was unable to capitalise, shut down by excellent bowling from spinners Ish Sodhi, who took 2 for 22 from his four overs, and Williamson who took 1 for 9 from two.

But the winning performanc­e of the match was the innings of Anderson who hit a New Zealand record 10 sixes, surpassing the mark of eight set by Brendon Mccullum. He needed 14 runs from the last three balls of the innings for a century but was unable to reach that milestone.

“I didn’t know about the record but when you get in the mood like that you just hit the hills and hope for the best,” Anderson said. “I think me and Kane realized we needed a few more runs to make the total defendible.”

New Zealand lost the early wickets of James Neesham — promoted to open in the absence of wicketkeep­er Luke Ronchi who has a groin injury — and Colin Munro, who made a century in the second match of the series on Friday but was out for a three-ball duck on Sunday.

New Zealand was in trouble when it lost Tom Bruce (5) in the seventh over when it was 44 for 3. But Williamson rebuilt the innings in partnershi­p with Anderson, starting at first by taking regular singles then allowing Anderson to play his big-hitting game later in the innings.

Williamson reached his half century from 44 balls, was dropped by Shakib Al Hasan off Masrafe’s bowling on 54 and went on to 60 before being bowled by Rubel Hossain, who finished with 3 for 31.

Anderson dashed to his half century from only 27 balls, including two fours and five sixes. He launched New Zealand’s assault on the Bangladesh bowlers with two sixes among 22 runs from Masrafe’s bowling, then took three consective sixes from Soumya Sarkar in the 17th over.

Tamim Iqbal and promoted opener Soumya Sarkar gave Bangladesh a fast start, with 52 for 1 after five overs. BRIEF SCORES: New Zealand 194 for 4 (Corey Anderson 94 not out, Kane Williamson 60; Rubel Hossain 3-31) bt Bangladesh 167 for 6 (Soumya Sarkar 42, Shakib Al Hasan 41; Ish Sodhi 2-22, Trent Boult 2-48)

 ?? File ?? Corey Anderson’s 10 sixes was the most by a New Zealand batsman in a T20 innings, bettering the 8 hit by Brendon Mccullum.
File Corey Anderson’s 10 sixes was the most by a New Zealand batsman in a T20 innings, bettering the 8 hit by Brendon Mccullum.

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