The New Zealand Herald

Taylor’s stunning summer

Master batsman continues his summer of milestones superbly supported by blossoming Nicholls as Caps whitewash Sri Lanka

- Niall Anderson

First Kiwi to score 20 ODI hundreds

Equalled NZ record of six consecutiv­e ODI 50s

Eight 50s in his last nine innings

Averages 92 since start of 2018

When a New Zealand batsman can smoke 124 from 80 balls, yet not be the team’s most important contributo­r, then things are going pretty damn well for the Black Caps.

In what is surely the richest vein of form ever seen by a New Zealand cricketer in one format, Ross Taylor’s 137 anchored the Black Caps at Saxton Oval, before Henry Nicholls bashed his first one-day century as the hosts posted an intimidati­ng 364-4 on their way to a 115-run victory.

Once again, Sri Lanka showed more fight with the bat than the ball; with Thisara Perera again a thorn in New Zealand’s side with an entertaini­ng 80, but the visitors collapsed once he left, as the Black Caps sealed a 3-0 series sweep.

Taylor was named man of the match, after an innings which continued his summer of milestones. For the 20th time in ODI cricket, the helmet came off and the tongue was stuck out as he celebrated yet another one-day century — smiting nine fours and four sixes in his 131-ball knock.

The first New Zealander to reach 20 centuries in any format, the 34-year-old’s form has been nothing short of remarkable.

Since 2018 began, he averages an absurd 92, at a strike rate of 93, and yesterday, Taylor brought up his sixth consecutiv­e 50 — tying the New Zealand record.

While Taylor’s form has been a constant over the past few years, Nicholls has truly blossomed this summer.

In tests since November, Nicholls had scored three fifties and two centuries, and he added his maiden ODI century to the mix in a brutal innings.

The Canterbury left-hander brought up his 50 from 44 balls, and needed only 27 more to move through to a ton — the sixth-fastest in New Zealand ODI history.

He linked up with Taylor — adding 154, and then bashed a rapid 63 with Jimmy Neesham, but Nicholls was allowed the platform to punish thanks to the earlier accomplish­ments of Taylor and skipper Kane Williamson.

The Black Caps’ only minor batting issue has been their lack of opening partnershi­ps, and this time neither Martin Guptill nor Colin Munro shone, leaving Williamson and Taylor to join forces at 31-2.

Taylor was admittedly fortunate early on. He would have been run out on his second ball had the throw been accurate but ended up earning four overthrows. His next scoring shot was a french cut for four but that was all the luck he needed.

Williamson and Taylor’s accumulati­on was helped by more shocking middle-order bowling by Sri Lanka. Lakshan Sandakan’s solitary wicket was the only scalp claimed by a Sri Lankan spinner all series, part-timers were easily dispatched, and Lasith Malinga and Nuwan Pradeep went for a combined 170 from 19 overs.

Williamson made 55 off 65 before holing out trying to clear mid-wicket in a probably unnecessar­y shot but Taylor pushed on.

Peppering the legside with fantastica­lly wristy strokeplay, Taylor brought up his milestone ton off 112 balls, before producing his traditiona­l booming sixes over cow corner.

There were 64 runs that came through mid-wicket or long-on, and though he was eventually caught on the square leg boundary, Nicholls and Neesham were even more explosive, adding 63 off the last 22 balls to set Sri Lanka another mammoth chase.

As usual, they had their moments. Niroshan Dickwella (46), Dhananjaya de Silva (36) and Kusal Perera (43) all had handy cameos as the New Zealand seam attack took some stick, but steady wickets fell as Williamson (0-24 from five overs) and Ish Sodhi (3-40 from 8.4) increased an already challengin­g required run-rate.

Thisara Perera attempted a second miracle, with help again from New Zealand fielders, as Tim Seifert and Taylor shelled chances.

However, Guptill showed them how it’s done, taking a stunning onehanded catch running backwards from point to end the danger, and end Sri Lanka’s hopes.

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Photo / Photosport
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