Taranaki Daily News

Santner silences his critics

- IAN ANDERSON

Conversion rates in cricket don’t always have to be about turning fifties into centuries.

On Sunday night in Hamilton, Mitchell Santner would have converted a number of New Zealand cricket fans from nonbelieve­rs into disciples.

After being set up by a wonderful partnershi­p between Ross Taylor and Tom Latham, Santner saw the Black Caps home by three wickets with four balls to spare in the first of five one-day internatio­nals against England.

The left-handed allrounder smote an unbeaten 45 off 27 balls as New Zealand surpassed England’s

284-8 at Seddon Park. Santner this summer has become something of a whipping boy for Black Caps fans, but after a strong spell with the ball - 2-54 off his 10 overs - his ability to hit the white ball over the boundary under severe pressure should have won fans over.

The 26-year-old was happy to deflect the credit the way of his team-mates, as Ross Taylor and Tom Latham put on a crucial fourth-wicket partnershi­p of 178 after NZ had slumped to 27-3 in the

10th over.

‘‘The way Tommy Latham and Ross set that up for us at the end gave us a chance to do what we did at the end there,’’ Santner said.

‘‘Being three down under the pump early - that brilliant partnershi­p in the middle set it up for us.

‘‘We talked about we could chase tens - but it was hard to start, the new batsman incoming having to hit straight away was always going to be difficult.’’

He said Taylor advised him he could ‘‘take a few dots to get in but you could catch up later on at the end’’.

‘‘Good that he listened,’’ Taylor chimed in as the two sat side-byside at the media conference afterwards.

‘‘Wise words, eh?’’ Santner replied. ‘‘Ross and I were talking about 50 off five, if me and him Scoreboard from the first one-day internatio­nal at Seddon Park, Hamilton.

ENGLAND

J Roy b Santner ................................................ 49 J Bairstow c Taylor b Boult ......................... 4 J Root b Munro .................................................. 71 E Morgan c Southee b Sodhi ..................... 8 B Stokes c Taylor b Santner ..................... 12 J Buttler run out ............................................... 79 M Ali c Guptill b Sodhi .................................. 28 C Woakes c and b Boult ............................... 11 D Willey not out .................................................. 11 T Curran not out ................................................. 0 Extras (1b, 4lb, 6w) ................................... 11 Total (for 8 wkts) ................................. 284 Fall: 10, 89, 104, 139, 181, 228, 253,

284.

Bowling: T Southee 10-1-48-0 (2w), T Boult 10-0-64-2 (3w), M Santner

10-0-54-2, C de Grandhomme 4-0-20-0, I Sodhi 10-0-63-2 (1w), C Munro 6-0-31-1.

NEW ZEALAND

M Guptill c Stokes b Woakes ................... 13 C Munro c Buttler b Woakes ..................... 6 K Williamson c Buttler b Willey ............... 8 R Taylor st Buttler b Rashid ..................... 113 T Latham c Root b Stokes ........................ 79 H Nicholls c Roy b Curran ........................... 0 C de Grandhomme c Buttler b Stokes ............................................................................................. 2 M Santner not out .......................................... 45 T Southee not out .............................................. 8 Extras (5lb, 8w) ........................................... 13 Total (for 7 wkts, 49.2 overs) ...... 287 Fall: 6, 27, 27, 205, 206, 215, 244. Bowling: D Willey 6-1-26-1, C Woakes 8.2-0-47-2 (1w), T Curran

10-0-65-1 (2w), B Stokes 8-0-43-2 (2w), M Ali 5-0-30-0, A Rashid 10-0-55-1 (1w), J Root 2-0-16-0 (2w).

Result: New Zealand won by three wickets, lead five-match series 1-0. could bat to the 46th [over] and go from there, just set little targets and then take it deep as we can.’’

England’s 284-8 after being sent in was seen as a par score by both sides. Joe Root provided the backbone with 71 off 75 deliveries while batting at No 6, wicketkeep­er Jos Buttler made a powerful 79 from only 65 balls.

‘‘Tim and Trent at the start bowled very well,’’ Santner said.

‘‘They [England] played well through the middle, Root and Butler, they had a good second 30-over block.

‘‘We managed to get wickets enough at times to stem - the last 10 [overs], 68 [runs], a probably a bit under par these days, we see 90, 95-plus.’’

Taylor got to 113 from 116 balls before being beaten by leggie Adil Rashid and stumped by Buttler as the two teams produced a nailbiting finish. Latham made a polished 79 from 84 deliveries.

During Taylor’s innings, he went past the 7000-run mark in ODIs, becoming the third New Zealand batsman to do so after Stephen Fleming and Nathan Astle, with a superior average.

It was his 18th ODI century - the most by a NZ batsman - and his third at Seddon Park, where he averages 51.78 in one-dayers.

His knock and that of Latham set the stage for Santner, who ended the match by sending a Chris Woakes’ delivery into the stands at wide long-on and raising both arms in triumph.

‘‘I didn’t know what to do,’’ he confessed. ‘‘I don’t usually celebrate.’’

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Mitchell Santner celebrates after hitting the winning runs against England at Seddon Park in Hamilton.
GETTY IMAGES Mitchell Santner celebrates after hitting the winning runs against England at Seddon Park in Hamilton.

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