Khaleej Times

India beat Kiwis by D/L method in warm-up tie

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london — Defending champions India hit all the right chords during their resounding 45-run victory against New Zealand via Duckworth-Lewis method in a rain-curtailed warm-up game where skipper Virat Kohli came good after an impressive show from the bowlers.

Comeback man Mohammed Shami (3/47 in 8 overs) along with Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar (3/28 in 6.4 overs) shared bulk of the spoils to dismiss New Zealand for a meagre 189 in 38.4 overs.

In reply, India were 129 for 3 in 26 overs, when rain stopped play but they were comfortabl­y ahead of the Black Caps as per Duckworth-Lewis par score of 84 after 26 overs.

Kohli started his English summer on a bright note hitting an unbeaten 52 off 55 balls while Mahendra Singh Dhoni also played some delightful strokes square off the wicket.

Shikhar Dhawan on his comeback got some quality time out there in the middle hitting 40 off 59 balls with the help of five boundaries, mostly square off the wicket.

Ajinkya Rahane (7), who is unlikely to find a place in the starting XI against Pakistan on June 4, did not do his case a world of good trying to hook a short-pitched delivery Tim Southee. Dinesh Karthik (0) was given a chance as Kedar Jadhav is a certainty but he was all at sea against the swing.

But it was skipper Kohli, who did play a few uppish shots but controlled an easy run-chase adding 68 runs for the second wicket with Dhawan. More importantl­y, Kohli got a fair amount of game time which will keep in good stead.

There was a straight drive off Adam Milne, a couple of cover drives off Tim Southee, an elegant pull-shot. There were a couple of uppish drives which could have gone into the hands of the fielder but Kohli looked positive.

Even Mahendra Singh Dhoni looked good during the brief stint at the crease. The two boundaries and a six were all square cuts. The six could have gone into Colin de Grandhomme’s hands but he was a few yards inside the rope and missed the flight. The two boundaries were pure timing which generated a lot of power.

It was one such day where everything went in favour of India. Even though it’s practice game but Kohli will gain a lot of confidence from the victory after a string of demoralizi­ng defeats in the recently concluded Indian Premier League.

Opting to bat after the coin landed in his favour, Kane Williamson’s side struggled to counter India’s discipline­d bowling effort led by the pace duo of Shami and Bhuvneshwa­r.

Former champions New Zealand’s innings lasted 38.4 overs.

Playing in his first 50-over game for India since the 2015 World Cup semifinal, the 27-year-old Shami quickly got into the act and removed Martin Guptill in the third over, the extra bounce catching the batsman by surprise.

A 43-run partnershi­p ensued between Luke Ronchi and Williamson, before Shami had the skipper caught at wide slip by a diving Ajinkya Rahane.—

 ?? AFP ?? Mohammed Shami (left) celebrates the wicket of New Zealand’s Neil Broom with India’s captain Virat Kohli. —
AFP Mohammed Shami (left) celebrates the wicket of New Zealand’s Neil Broom with India’s captain Virat Kohli. —

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