The New Zealand Herald

One last chance for Ferns

NZ risk underachie­ving at World Cup unless they can beat India in last round robin game

- Andrew Alderson

New Zealand need to prove they are more than a team for the small occasion at the cricket World Cup in England.

The White Ferns brim with profession­al talent in demand on the global Twenty20 franchise stage, yet have lost to Australia and England in the key contests of their campaign.

Last night’s 75-run loss to the hosts in Derby leaves New Zealand (fifth on the table with seven points) facing an effective quarter-final against India (fourth with eight points) in their last round robin match at the same venue on Saturday night. England, Australia and South Africa have qualified for the semifinals.

New Zealand’s top four chances will become a mirage if their potential again outweighs their applicatio­n.

An abandoned match against South Africa stymied their momentum, but the hammerings of Sri Lanka, the West Indies and Pakistan revealed the batting pedigrees of captain Suzie Bates and Amy Satterthwa­ite (Sri Lanka), Rachel Priest (West Indies) and Sophie Devine (Pakistan) in comfortabl­e chases.

They need to take those uncompromi­sing recipes into their knockout cricket.

Batting rather than bowling has been the main problem. England are the only side to score at more than five-runs-per-over against them, and even they were restricted early.

After the England defeat, Bates admonished herself and Satterthwa­ite (who became the ninth White Fern to reach a century of one-day internatio­nal caps) for failing to anchor the chase. New Zealand were humming at 89 for one in the 20th over chasing 285 to win as a second- wicket stand of 75 prospered. Then Bates went for 44, followed 10 runs later by Satterthwa­ite for 35.

“Amy and I would be the first to admit that once we got in and had a partnershi­p, one of us had to score a big hundred. We got out to loose shots and not the right options on that wicket,” said Bates. “We never got behind the run rate, it was just about wickets. We didn’t have enough in hand towards the end.

“We started brilliantl­y with the ball. I could have tried a few more bowling changes but the leg spinners have been crucial for us and they potentiall­y didn’t bowl as well as they could have in their first spells. Then we were chasing the game.”

After beating Australia, England reinforced their tournament favourite status by dismissing New Zealand for 209 in 46.4 overs.

A 170-run fourth-wicket partnershi­p between Natalie Sciver (129 off 111 balls) and Tammy Beaumont (93 off 102 balls) dictated the result.

The pair counter-attacked to take the score from 52 for three in the 14th over to 222 for four in the 41st. Sciver benefitted from a Leigh Kasperek spill at short backward square leg on 58.

Leg spinner Amelia Kerr took four for 51 from nine overs, although the flight from Kasperek’s off spin was promising early; she finished with two for 49 from 10 overs.

England left-arm orthodox Alex Hartley starred with three for 44 from 9.4 overs, including the wickets of Bates and Devine for eight.

“It was a good target by England, but if one of our top order had scored big, then we thought it was gettable,” Bates said. “We’ve played some good cricket in this tournament, so it’s not doom and gloom. It’s a big game against India now.”

England captain Heather Knight inadverten­tly touched on what New Zealand need against the top teams.

“It’s lovely the batters are standing up and putting in big performanc­es. You want your top five getting runs.”

 ?? Picture / Getty Images ?? New Zealand’s Leigh Kasperek is bowled by Jenny Gunn as the White Ferns fell short of their target.
Picture / Getty Images New Zealand’s Leigh Kasperek is bowled by Jenny Gunn as the White Ferns fell short of their target.

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