Daily Dispatch

Taylor’s bravado wins day with sterling play

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INJURY-HIT Ross Taylor played through the pain to score an unbeaten 181 and remarkably seal a series-levelling five-wicket win for New Zealand in the fourth one-day internatio­nal against England yesterday.

Taylor limped through much of his innings in Dunedin after aggravatin­g a thigh injury, but batted on to compile a career-best innings and make it 2-2 in the series with one to play.

New Zealand ended on 339 for five in reply to England’s 335 for nine, taking the five-match series to a crunch decider in Christchur­ch on Saturday.

Taylor scored 17 fours and six sixes as New Zealand reached the target with three balls to spare, wincing with pain after every shot in the latter half of his innings.

His heroics in scoring his 19th ODI century overshadow­ed a fine batting performanc­e from England, marred by a late collapse that cost them dearly.

Jonny Bairstow blazed his way to 138 off 106 balls and Joe Root grafted out a hard-fought 102 before England self-destructed late in their innings.

New Zealand’s chase then started disastrous­ly when openers Martin Guptill and Colin Munro both went for ducks.

Kane Williamson and Taylor rebuilt with an 84-run partnershi­p before England’s star all-rounder Ben Stokes dismissed the New Zealand captain at 45 in the 17th over.

Taylor and Tom Latham then combined for a 187-run partnershi­p, with Latham contributi­ng 71.

Taylor’s injury came when he was on 109 and had to dive to avoid a run-out, inflaming the thigh strain that forced him out of the previous match in the series.

Unable to run freely, he concentrat­ed on hitting boundaries, taking New Zealand to the position where they needed 80 off the final 10 overs.

England slowed New Zealand’s momentum with Latham’s dismissal and Colin de Grandhomme’s departure on 23.

Henry Nicholls looked nervy when he came to the crease but worked well to give Taylor most of the strike.

With three runs needed off the final over, Nicholls faced two dot balls then smashed Tom Curran for six as a tearful Taylor left the field to a standing ovation after his brave fight. — AFP

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