The Press

Sodhi bolsters ODI spin ranks

- MARK GEENTY

Ish Sodhi could play his first oneday cricket internatio­nal since May as the New Zealand selectors bolster their spin ranks to face England amid some injury worries.

The legspinner was added to a

14-man Black Caps squad for the first two matches of the five-ODI series, also featuring incumbents Mitchell Santner (knee) and Todd Astle (side) who were recently sidelined for brief periods.

Otherwise coach Mike Hesson and co-selector Gavin Larsen named an unchanged squad for the series opener in Hamilton on Sunday, hardly surprising given New Zealand’s eight-match ODI winning streak against West Indies and Pakistan at home.

Wicketkeep­er Tom Latham retained his place as the sole gloveman despite a lean run of form with the bat, which may place his No 5 spot under scrutiny if he misses out in Hamilton and Tauranga.

Sodhi played the last of his 18 ODIs against Ireland in Dublin in May, and was since pigeonhole­d as a Twenty20 player as fellow legspinner Astle went past him in the ODI ranks.

Astle made his long-awaited ODI debut against West Indies in December and in six matches took seven wickets at an impressive

21.42 and economy rate of 5.35. He also contribute­d with the bat, averaging 34.5 from four innings at a strike rate of 113.

The 31-year-old, who missed two Ford Trophy matches with a side strain, returned for Canterbury to take 1-58 off 10 overs yesterday as Auckland plundered 304-6 in the eliminatio­n final.

Santner remains the side’s premier limited overs spinner and after missing last Friday’s T20 against Australia with a knee injury returned two days later for the England match in Hamilton.

New Zealand will likely want to play two spinners at Seddon Park on Sunday, and possibly Bay Oval on Wednesday, which means Sodhi could be unleashed if there are fitness concerns over the others.

It was difficult to see anyone dropped from the 5-0 sweep over Pakistan, with Latham’s position probably creating the most discussion.

Since Latham’s 137 against Bangladesh in Christchur­ch on Boxing Day 2016, he’s batted 14 times in home ODIs for a top score of 37, and nine single-figure innings. That dropped his ODI average in New Zealand to 20.89 from 33 matches (his career ODI average is 33), after a dominant series in India last year.

For Canterbury in the Ford Trophy he scored 46 not out, 6, 2, 34 and 29 against Auckland on Wednesday, dismissed by parttime spinner Glenn Phillips.

Current T20 gloveman Tim Seifert has impressed with the bat and could come into serious considerat­ion later in the ODI series, along with Wellington’s Tom Blundell who stepped up well to test level against West Indies.

England look set to welcome back star allrounder Ben Stokes for his first internatio­nal since September on Sunday, as they start the series as the world’s third-ranked ODI team fresh from a 4-1 series win in Australia. New Zealand are ranked fourth.

❚ For last night’s T20 tri-series final between New Zealand and Australia go to stuff.co.nz

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