The New Zealand Herald

Black Caps loselose ... and win

England win by two runs but Black Caps pass run rate target which ensures berth in final against Australia

- Andrew Alderson in Hamilton

England triumphed by two runs in their T20 internatio­nal against New Zealand in Hamilton, but failed to prevent the hosts reaching Wednesday’s tri-series final against Australia due to net run rate.

A compelling match came down to 12 runs required off the final over, and four runs from the final ball, as Tom Curran pitched up and forced Colin de Grandhomme to drive to long-off for a single.

England held their nerve in the final stanzas despite a rollicking chase. Some of the result’s impact was diluted once New Zealand reached 175, the score required to return them to Eden Park. They finished on 192 for four.

The Black Caps chase looked promising after the 14th over when left-arm orthodox spinner Liam Dawson completed his spell. He could afford some confidence, having conceded nine runs from three overs and claiming the wicket of Kane Williamson. Martin Guptill and Mark Chapman tore 18 runs off him. Dawson maintained his dignity with a dot ball to finish.

Guptill continued the form he struck with an Eden Park century last week, gathering speed on his way to 62 off 47. Chapman showed the pedigree which has brought him into the team on the back of Auckland domestic bliss and Hong Kong internatio­nal experience. The way he found his arc to clear the legside demonstrat­ed the height of profession­alism as part of 37 not out off 30 balls.

The pair’s 64-run third-wicket partnershi­p off 32 balls — a strike rate of 200 — matched the 78-run off 39-ball pace generated by Colin Munro and Guptill to open up.

Munro set the tone in a display of binary belligeren­ce off the opening overs of David Willey and Curran. The scorebook read 6, 0, 0, 0, 6, 6, 6 as he went on to unleash 57 off 21, including seven sixes. His halfcentur­y came in 18 balls.

England hope was justified as they produced the third highest total in eight T20s at Seddon Park. The visitors’ batting line-up struck in waves on their way to 194 for seven.

A 93-run third-wicket partnershi­p from 54 balls between Dawid Malan and captain Eoin Morgan negotiated an awkward period at 24 for two in the fourth over.

When Malan exited for 53 off 36 balls, his fourth half-century in five T20 internatio­nal innings, New Zealand pounced between overs 13-16, shared by de Grandhomme (two), Ish Sodhi and Tim Southee.

England produced a picket fence of 16 singles. That included a gate in the middle with the stumping of Jos Buttler as the Northern Districts Tim Seifert-Sodhi combinatio­n struck.

However, Morgan maintained momentum as part of his second highest T20I score. He finished on 80 not out from 46 balls to earn manof-the-match honours.

Spin has succeeded in T20s at Hamilton this season, but Mitchell Santner, Sodhi and Williamson struggled to use that to their advantage against England’s juggernaut.

Santner was brought back into the New Zealand side after Ben Wheeler’s expensive outing at Eden Park against Australia.

His bandaged right knee had recovered sufficient­ly to play, but England offered no mercy, taking him for 11 from the second over of the game. When the left-arm orthodox spinner returned in the 11th, Morgan continued the assault with 19 runs. Two wides worsened the punishment. He didn’t bowl again.

Sodhi offered more control. His first and fourth overs cost three runs apiece and included Buttler’s wicket. They bookended concession­s of 11 and 14.

Captain Williamson brought himself on in the seventh over — after the powerplay — to take his off breaks away from left-handers Malan and Morgan. They were on to his ruse and picked him off for 16 runs — taking eight runs apiece including two sixes.

Southee was the best of the New Zealand bowlers with a ‘Richie Benaud special’ of two for 22. He found a controlled length by conceding two runs — including a wide — and dismissing Hales with a slower ball in the third over. He also removed Willey to dam England’s flow at the death.

“It was bitterswee­t really,” Munro said. “It’s nice to be in the final, but the boys were disappoint­ed not to win. England bowled really well in those last couple of overs, they hit their yorkers and we weren’t quite able to get on top.”

“It doesn’t feel like a win,” said Morgan. “We knew 174 was the target to restrict them to at the halfway stage. Once that went, the guys’ heads went down, but they finished well. Once the dew kicks in, variations are non-existent until the ball gets older so defending those first six overs was a good test for our guys running into those two [Munro and Guptill] in good form. We had no right to be in the final. We’ve played terrible so far in the tri-series, apart from [last night].”

Another lucky fan has bagged $50,000 after a sensationa­l onehanded catch in the crowd during New Zealand’s Twenty20 loss to England last night.

Rudi Bosman stretched out and took a stunning one-handed catch at Hamilton’s Seddon Park, becoming the third Tui Catch a Million promotion winner and the second in successive Black Caps matches.

Bosman, who caught Dawid Malan’s huge six over long-on, was ecstatic after the catch.

“Feeling awesome,” said Bosman. “I’m very excited. I knew if the ball was coming my way, I’d catch it, and so it proved.”

When asked if he had a message for his wife watching at home, he said: “Please don’t spend all the money yet.”

His winning effort came after student Mitch Grimstone took a low left-handed catch to earn $50,000 during New Zealand’s recordbrea­king loss to Australia at Eden Park on Friday.

England won last night’s match by two runs but New Zealand advanced to Wednesday’s tri-series final against Australia at Eden Park thanks to a superior run rate.

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 ?? Picture / Getty Images ?? Colin Munro set the early pace for New Zealand.
Picture / Getty Images Colin Munro set the early pace for New Zealand.
 ?? Picture / Photosport ?? Rudi Bosman reached high to take his lucrative catch.
Picture / Photosport Rudi Bosman reached high to take his lucrative catch.

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