Gulf Today

Marsh’s magic gives maiden T20 World Cup title to Aussies

A clinical unbeaten knock from Marsh (77 not out off 50 balls) along with a crucial half-century from Warner (53 off 38 balls) led Australia to their first Men’s T20 World Cup trophy, defeating New Zealand by eight wickets in the final

- Mohammad Abdullah

Riding on a blitzkrieg fities by David Warner and Mitchell Marsh, Australia rekindled their romance with the ICC tournament­s with an eight-wicket victory against New Zealand in the final of the T20 World Cup in Dubai.

Australia finally ended their jinx by winning the elusive T20 World Cup title in the seventh atempt. This was the only silverware, which was missing from their trophy-laden cabinet. Before this, they had come closest to liting the crown in 2010, only to be denied by England in the final.

They rubbed the salt on New Zealand’s wounds by beating them in the second title showdown in six years albeit in a different format this time, making light work of a target of 173.

Kangaroos had defeated the Trans-tasman rivals in the final of the 50-over World Cup in 2015. They also maintained their dominance over New Zealand in the knock-out matches, winning 16 of 17 clashes till date.

Ater Trent Boult had pushed Australia on the back foot by an early dismissal of Aaron Finch, Warner took the onus on his shoulder and played a sheet-anchor role.

He along with Marsh added 92 runs for the second wicket to stitch the innings and keep Australia in the hunt. Warner showed a steely resolute as he played with determinat­ion to keep New Zealand bowlers at bay.

All the Kiwi’s bowlers were meted out with the same treatment except Boult, who bowled an impressive first spell. Both Marsh and Warner played sensibly and took the match deep before cuting loose. Warner was the more brutal of the two as he brought up third fity of the tourney with a six, scoring a whopping 289 in the showpiece event in seven innings.

Boult got rid of the dangerman in his second spell but it was too late and the damage had been done. Ater the dismissal of Warner, Marsh stepped up and took the charge in hands.

Marsh and Glenn Maxwell shared an unbeaten 66-run stand for the third wicket to see Australia home with seven balls to spare. Marsh remained unbeaten on 77, hiting six boundaries and four sixes.

Earlier, Hazlewood got Daryl Mitchell caught by Wade to give Australia the first breakthrou­gh. Ater losing the first wicket with just 28 runs on the board, New Zealand mellowed down and trod along cautiously as trying to avoid stamping on some mine, which could trigger a collapse.

Kane Williamson led from the front and smacked a whirlwind fity. He along with Martin Guptill knuckled down to mend the innings. The plan was clear — not to lose the wickets and go ater the bowlers in the second half of the innings.

Both the batsmen played sensibly and kept the scoreboard ticking with singles and doubles, hiting occasional boundaries to share a 48-run partnershi­p for the second wicket.

Seeing the opportunit­y, Finch squeezed in Maxwell and Marsh to bowl the quota of the fith bowler in the middle of the innings. Both did fairly well until the New Zealand batsmen changed gears in the 13th over and took 16 runs off it bowled by Maxwell.

Both Marsh and Maxwell conceded a combined 39 runs — 21 less than given by Mitchell Starc in his four overs — as Maxwell went for 28 in three overs while Marsh gave away 11 in his one.

But to the dismay of Australia, a rampaging Williamson decided to cut loose and became almost unstoppabl­e. He raced to his fity with a six. Guptill holed out to Marcus Stoinis off Adam Zampa at the boundary ater scoring a painstakin­gly slow 28 off 35 balls.

Williamson added another 68 runs with Glenn Philips in just six overs. He plundered 22 runs of Starc’s over to spur the run rate. Hammering of the pace spearhead prompted Finch to think of more options as Starc had already conceded 50 runs in just three overs.

Finch once again showed his confidence in Pat Cummins, who had bowled a wonderful penultimat­e over against Pakistan in the semi-final, giving away only three runs.

He lived up to the expectatio­ns of his captain and pulled it back for Australia. He choked the free flow of runs and bowled a tight 18th over, giving away just 8 runs off it.

New Zealand, who at one stage looked set to reach 190-run mark, failed to capitalize on the plaform. They were frustrated by Cummins and played some reckless shots.

The Kiwis lost quite a few wickets in quick succession and fell short of 10-15 runs than expected. Hazlewood got rid of both Philip and Williamson as Australia clawed back into the game.

Philip was taken by Maxwell while Williamson’s marathon innings came to an abrupt run with a simple catch which landed in the safe hands of Smith at long-off.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Australia’s Mitchell Marsh (left) celebrates their win in the ICC Twenty20 World Cup final against New Zealand on Sunday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Australia’s Mitchell Marsh (left) celebrates their win in the ICC Twenty20 World Cup final against New Zealand on Sunday.

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