Malta Independent

New Zealand cruises past Bangladesh to complete series sweep

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New Zealand captain Kane Williamson made an unbeaten 95 and deployed his bowlers expertly on a slow pitch to steer the hosts to a comfortabl­e eightwicke­t win over Bangladesh in the third one-day internatio­nal yesterday, completing a clean sweep of the series.

Williamson shared a record 185run partnershi­p with Neil Broom (97) for the second wicket which guided New Zealand to 239-2, winning with 8.4 overs to spare, in response to Bangladesh’s inadequate total of 236-9.

Their partnershi­p was the highest for the second wicket by New Zealand in one-day internatio­nals against all nations.

Broom was dropped before he had scored at first slip by Imrul Kayes from the bowling of Mustafizur Rahman. He took full advantage of the reprieve and was approachin­g back-to-back centuries when he gave Mustafizur belated revenge by edging a ball from the young fast bowler to captain Masrafe Mortaza at gully.

By that stage, New Zealand was 195-2 and well on the way to victory against a Bangladesh team that was again undone by a middle-order collapse, as it was in the previous game.

The visitors were 102-0 after winning the toss and batting, with Tamim Iqbal (59) and Imrual Kayes (44) sharing a century opening stand. But the top order crumbled to 170-6.

Bangladesh’s bowlers applied early pressure, dismissing opener Tom Latham for 4 and then seeing Martin Guptill retire hurt with a hamstring strain, leaving the home team effectivel­y two wickets down with 16 runs scored.

Had Broom’s chance to slip been taken, New Zealand would have been hard-pressed to stave off its

Williamson again deployed his bowlers well on a Saxton Oval pitch which was too slow to allow confident shot-making. He handed the new ball to the 36year-old off-spinner Jeetan Patel, who was playing his first one-day internatio­nal since 2009, and gave 28 of the 50 overs to slow bowlers, personally taking 1-24 from eight overs of off-spin.

“There were some good individual performanc­es but as a team we couldn’t go through with it,” Mortaza said.

“After five years coming to play in New Zealand we’re improving lots. There are some issues but we have to prove as a team we’re a lot better.”

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