Sportstar

SETTING SHORT-TERM GOALS

- WRIDDHAAYA­N BHATTACHAR­YYA

New Zealand will be keen on adding to its ICC cabinet after the World Test Championsh­ip triumph in June. Placed in a competitiv­e group alongside India, Pakistan and Afghanista­n, the Kiwis will thrive on the leadership skills of Kane Williamson.

Nine out of the 15 players have been part of the Indian Premier League in the United Arab Emirates. Their views and mindset can help the others in the group acclimatis­e faster.

All-format player

This Cup could belong to Devon Conway. Always on a mission, the left-hander is an all-format player for the Black Caps. Though he hasn’t played in the UAE, he will be a fast learner to adjust to the conditions.

It’s not even a year since Conway made his internatio­nal debut, and he already has a double hundred in Tests, an ODI hundred and almost one in a T20I — he had finished 99 not out against Australia in Christchur­ch in March. Conway is South Africa’s gift to New Zealand. The Johannesbu­rg-born cricketer moved to the island nation in 2017. He was eligible to represent the national team from August 2020.

Martin Guptill, one of the senior-most campaigner­s, still remains a strong weapon in the batting order. The right-hander struck form in the series against Australia with two match-winning fifties.

Williamson will be the anchor, who is capable of batting till the end to finish the games.

Strong bowling line-up

The bowling department is straight out of the ICC T20I ranking books. Ish Sodhi, Mitchell Santner and Tim Southee are all in the top 10 list of bowlers. Trent Boult, Lockie

Ferguson and Kyle Jamieson can win games in one or two spells.

Mark Chapman, who represente­d Hong Kong in the T20 World Cup in 2014 and 2016, will experience a special moment in a different jersey. New Zealand can experiment with the left-right combinatio­n as it has four specialist­s in its armoury — Conway, Chapman, James Neesham and Santner.

Pakistan was dealt with a massive economic blow after New Zealand pulled out of the limited-overs series in September. Coincident­ally, the Black Caps will face the men in green in their opening fixture on October 26 in Sharjah.

“Obviously, what happened in Pakistan was sad for Pakistan cricket, their players and also our players, who missed out on that opportunit­y as well. We can’t change what has happened there. All we can do is prepare for the tournament and we face Pakistan first up,” New Zealand coach Gary Stead told reporters ahead of the tournament.

Stead knows it will be challengin­g to beat the teams in Group 2, but he has set shortterm goals. “I guess our first one is focusing on one game at a time, but the main goal is to get to that semi-finals stage and if you’re there, you’ll know that you’re only two wins away from a title.

“We’re in a tough pool, I genuinely think there are six to seven teams that could win this tournament and I guess that’s good for world cricket as well,” he said.

Weakness: New Zealand looks a complete side.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Trump card: It’s not even a year since Devon Conway made his internatio­nal debut, and he already has a double hundred in Tests, an ODI hundred and almost one in a T20I — he had finished 99 not out against Australia in Christchur­ch in March.
GETTY IMAGES Trump card: It’s not even a year since Devon Conway made his internatio­nal debut, and he already has a double hundred in Tests, an ODI hundred and almost one in a T20I — he had finished 99 not out against Australia in Christchur­ch in March.

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