Hawke's Bay Today

Ferns keep England series alive with three-wicket win

- Isabelle Westbury

New Zealand finally overcame England with a three-wicket win to keep the fivematch one-day internatio­nal series alive.

Two maiden landmarks did the trick for the tourists: a searing five-wicket haul from returning quick Lea Tahuhu and a first half-century against a top-tier side for Maddy Green. That we had to wait until the final ball of New Zealand’s innings for the first six, struck sweetly off Tahuhu’s bat to win the game, reflected its nature: a scrappy, lowscoring, stop-start affair.

A triumphant Tahuhu makes for a compelling narrative. She has only recently returned to internatio­nal cricket following three surgeries to remove a mole on her landing foot, at the time suspected to be cancerous.

Tahuhu, who has been “like a caged animal” according to her captain, Sophie Devine, has been building towards her five for 37 too. She has bowled throughout this series with good pace and line, hurrying any batter who stands in her way. Yesterday’s returns were just reward: a caged animal finally freed.

The visitors’ victory was not without its wobbles, however. Katherine Brunt struck an unbeaten 49 from No 8 while Kate Cross, at No 10, was England’s next best with a careerhigh score of 29.

The batting alone was not enough to satisfy Brunt, who was soon tearing in to claim four wickets for just 22 runs. It made for a game more exciting than it should have been, New Zealand scrambling home with just three wickets in hand in the 46th over.

It should never have been so close. By the time Tahuhu had her fifth wicket, and England’s seventh, the hosts had just 78 runs on a pitch and an outfield that did not seem to have too much wrong with it. Only Brunt, drawing on all her 130 ODI caps, with the aid of Cross, prevented anything worse than the 178 England were eventually bowled out for.

Brunt provided the applicatio­n and temperamen­t absent from those before her. Like Danni Wyatt in the second ODI, hitting an unbeaten 63, Brunt likes to have bat on ball and the world against her. This, however, was not what the situation called for. Instead it was for someone to shepherd England’s tail (again) and trying (but ultimately failing) to make use of all their allotted 50 overs.

It is a familiar situation, England having been bowled out batting first on all five occasions this summer. This weakness has not been lost on New Zealand, who have won all three tosses and inserted the hosts every time. England have a middle order which has failed on every occasion to win games for them. That they are 2-1 up in this series is down largely to their impressive bowling and some freak lowerorder partnershi­ps that should never have had the opportunit­y in the first place.

While the loss is a blow to England in the context of the series, it should be an impetus they need to address those middle-order issues which have long been loitering. They almost need a calamitous collapse and a ruthless routing to review an approach which better opposition may exploit.

Amy Jones (innings of 2, 1 and 21) is arguably better now behind the stumps than even Sarah Taylor was and has had an encouragin­g season both batting and leading on the domestic stage.

Lauren Winfield-Hill (21, 39 and 4) likewise, while Sophia Dunkley (5, 11 and 6) is England’s next-best thing as a hard-hitting middle-order batter but must learn to adjust. None of it is calamitous but this was another frustratin­g batting performanc­e from a line-up packed with talent but which must find a way when things are not always going their way.

 ?? Photos / Photosport ?? Lea Tahuhu celebrates the wicket of England skipper Heather Knight.
Photos / Photosport Lea Tahuhu celebrates the wicket of England skipper Heather Knight.
 ??  ?? Maddy Green scored her maiden ODI half-century.
Maddy Green scored her maiden ODI half-century.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand