The Pak Banker

England claim first blood in New Zealand T20 series

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A maiden half century from James Vince powered England to a convincing sevenwicke­t victory over New Zealand in the opening Twenty20 Internatio­nal in Christchur­ch on Friday.

Vince top-scored for the tourists with 59 as England chased down New Zealand's 154-run target in 18.3 overs to take a 1-0 lead in the fivematch series.

While Vince's man-of-thematch performanc­e caught the eye, captain Eoin Morgan was also full of praise for his bowlers, who laid the platform for victory by restrictin­g the Black Caps to 153 for five.

"The game was won and lost in the first innings [...] James Vince played outstandin­g well but all credit to the bowlers today," he said.

A three-wicket haul from spinner Mitchell Santner was not enough to rescue the Black Caps, whose batting line-up failed to fire after Morgan won the toss and sent them in.

England's win came despite the absence of several senior players, who have been rested for the series after a gruelling period that saw them win the World Cup and fail to reclaim the Ashes.

A trio of debutants in the team facing New Zealand fitted in seamlessly, with Sam Curran and Pat Brown both snaring a wicket each.

All-rounder Lewis Gregory was not needed with either bat or ball and will hope to make an impression when hostilitie­s resume in Wellington on Sunday.

Morgan said his squad was building its depth by blooding youngsters ahead of the T20 World Cup in Australia next year. "It's a chance for them to stake their claim," said the England captain, who emphatical­ly ended the match with a six off the final ball to finish on 34 not out.

New Zealand's regular captain Kane Williamson is out of the series with a hip injury and the Black Caps sorely missed his batting prowess.

Stand-in skipper Tim Southee said there was room for improvemen­t in bowling, batting and fielding. "We were probably a little bit off in all three areas," he said.

"We got a score on the board that we felt we could defend but we were a little bit off with the ball and in the field, which didn't help."

The poor form that dogged Martin Guptill at the World Cup continued when Curran coaxed an inside edge that crashed into middle stump.

Fellow opener Colin Munro tried to break the shackles but was too aggressive against Chris Jordan and was caught on the boundary for 21.

In reply, Jonny Bairstow made a positive start for England and it took a spectacula­r catch from Guptill for dismiss him for 35.

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