The New Zealand Herald

Tip from umpire comes too late to have decent crack at AB de Villiers’ fastest 50

- David Leggat in Christchur­ch

Martin Guptill insists he had no idea how well he was travelling on his way to his whirlwind half century which sped New Zealand to one of the quickest ODI victories at Hagley Oval yesterday.

And he admitted it was English umpire Richard Illingwort­h who gave him the tip how close he was to overtaking South African AB de Villiers as owner of the fastest 50 in the short form game. In fact, he probably wishes Illingwort­h has spoken up a few balls earlier.

Having rolled Sri Lanka for just 117, Guptill and opening partner Tom Latham were driving in the outside lane from the outset, hurtling to 118 in only 8.2 overs, Guptill’s 93 coming off only 30 balls — one fewer than de Villiers world’s quickest century.

And that after he was dropped first ball, off an attempted hook, at leg gully by Milinda Siriwardan­a.

‘‘Not at all,’’ Guptill said when asked if he knew his proximity to de Villiers’ record mark of 16 balls, against the West Indies at Johannesbu­rg last January.

‘‘I was just swinging. I was trying to hit as many runs as I could as quick as I could.

‘‘The first time I thought about it was when the umpire [ Illingwort­h] said ‘ you’ve got two balls to get it’.

‘‘That’s the first time it came into my head.”

At that point, Guptill received a couple of tidy deliveries, rarities yesterday, from which he could manage only two singles. That did for the record hopes, but Guptill insists he’s not a particular­ly statistics driven player.

Instead he relies on ‘‘ nuffy’’ team mate Ross Taylor to advise him of impending targets.

‘‘He goes and looks through the stats and says ‘you need another 100 runs to beat this person in the list. He’s pretty stats driven, a bit of a nuffy,’’ he quipped.

Guptill, the year’s leading ODI runmaker and 41 short of reaching 1500 for 2015, can take heart from the speed with which he and Latham completed their business.

They got the runs at a rate of 14.16 an over, the second best ODI mark behind New Zealand’s 15.83 achieved in walloping Bangladesh at Queenstown in 2007-08, when Brendon McCullum went on a tear.

The pair took 27 off speedster Dushmantha Chameera’s second over; 26 from legspinnin­g debutant Jeff Vandersay’s first over, as Guptill and Latham gave the crowd a cheerful time, even if it was only brief.

Indeed, the Christchur­ch crowds could feel seriously shortchang­ed.

Game one involved 68 overs; yesterday it was 36 as one team fully

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