The Post

Beaten Black Caps brace for rematch

- MARK GEENTY

In a fortnight’s time Bangladesh’s breakthrou­gh victory over New Zealand will barely rate a mention when they reconvene for the cricket match that matters.

The Black Caps bid farewell to Ireland with tri-series trophy in hand but an annoying lump in their plane seats after Bangladesh beat them for the first time in 17 attempts in one-day internatio­nals away from home in Clontarf yesterday.

Coach Mike Hesson gave credit to a full-strength Bangladesh, who moved past Sri Lanka to sixth on the world rankings, and had a small flick at his batsmen for being 20 runs short and his bowlers for being too wide when they should have defended 270-8. Bangladesh won by five wickets with 10 balls to spare.

But, when the New Zealanders meet their contingent of Indian Premier League absentees Kane Williamson, Martin Guptill, Tim Southee, Trent Boult, Colin de Grandhomme and Mitchell McClenagha­n in London it won’t matter much.

It’s a case of draw a line under the tri-series, in which they won their first three and unveiled an impressive stand-in captain Tom Latham, and finally switch focus to the Champions Trophy starting with a warmup match against India at The Oval on Sunday night (NZT). New Zealand and Bangladesh meet again in pool play in Cardiff on June 9.

‘‘They’re quite separate [tournament­s]. We’ve used a lot of different players which has been great for our developmen­t and also guys in the squad who haven’t had many playing opportunit­ies have got plenty,’’ Hesson said.

‘‘Everybody is confident heading into Champions Trophy and we’ve also used guys in different roles. Depending on the balance we go with, we’ve been able to give guys opportunit­ies.’’

Just six of the New Zealand XI who lost to Bangladesh will likely feature in their tournament opener against Australia on Friday week. Williamson, Guptill, Boult, de Grandhomme and one of Adam Milne, Southee or McClenagha­n are safe bets to come in.

From the Ireland squad Matt Henry, Ish Sodhi, Henry Nicholls, Colin Munro and Scott Kuggeleijn will be joined by IPL returnee Lockie Ferguson at a camp in Northampto­n under New Zealand Cricket’s high performanc­e coach Bob Carter. Hamish Bennett, Seth Rance and George Worker depart, all after tidy displays in the black kit.

Now for the selection headaches. Hesson and Williamson’s first meeting will discuss how they approach the warmup games against India, then Sri Lanka on Tuesday night at Edgbaston where they meet Australia three days later.

Tight calls involve the wicketkeep­er/opening batsman to partner Guptill, the pace bowling allrounder slots and who joins Boult as the other fast bowler if they play both spinners Mitchell Santner and Jeetan Patel which looks highly likely.

Latham top-scored with 84 and ended the tri-series averaging 64 at a strike rate of 88. He didn’t take the gloves, as he did during the home summer, while Luke Ronchi kept in all four matches and averaged 25 at a strike rate of 113.

Ronchi didn’t top 37 but got a pass mark and fulfilled the job descriptio­n of blazing away at the top to give the innings some momentum.

Ross Taylor and Broom, the likely four and five for New Zealand, averaged 65 and 57 respective­ly which was impressive, particular­ly Broom coming off a lean trot at home.

Allrounder­s Jimmy Neesham and Corey Anderson essentiall­y mirrored each other against Bangladesh, and Neesham probably still has his nose in front on his batting in recent months. De Grandhomme will probably get the second allrounder’s spot after regular IPL game time and his late seasons effort with bat and ball.

Patel (2-55) took the new ball at Clontarf and probably will against Australia, too, as two spinners at Edgbaston seems a given these days.

 ??  ?? New Zealand bowler Matt Henry can’t watch as Bangladesh close in on victory.
New Zealand bowler Matt Henry can’t watch as Bangladesh close in on victory.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand