The New Zealand Herald

What a win!

Black Caps grab super victory

- Andrew Alderson

Ross Taylor’s 18th one-day internatio­nal century and a heroic Mitchell Santner cameo led New Zealand to a three-wicket victory — with four balls to spare — over England in their series opener at Hamilton.

An astrophysi­cist or psychologi­st would struggle to bring context to the number crunching and mental pressure both contemplat­ed walking to the wicket.

Santner brought finality when he swung Chris Woakes for six over deep-mid-wicket to reach 45 not out from 27 balls with Tim Southee offering support. The challenge was steep when Santner arrived with 80 runs required off 49 balls.

“We knew we could chase 10-anover, but it was hard to start, and you might take a few dot balls but catch up later,” said Santner.

England captain Eoin Morgan was asked “how good was Santner’s innings?”

“Terrible,” he deadpanned. “He won them the game. That was a big moment taking 12 [at the start of the 48th over from Adil Rashid].”

Santner’s effort in the bat and ball tug-o-war hauled the match New Zealand’s way against the renowned English death bowling. But Taylor laid the platform. He entered at 27 for two in the ninth over with Kane Williamson traipsing past him. Within four dot balls, Martin Guptill was off too, as England bowlers David Willey and Chris Woakes dominated the opening powerplay. But Taylor and Tom Latham (79 from 84 balls) posted a 178-run partnershi­p in 182 balls, a record for the fourth-wicket between both countries.

“The two fours from Tom [in the 11th over from Willey] gave us the momentum shift and we got the partnershi­p going from there,” said Taylor.

“I always enjoy batting with Tom. The right hand-left hand combinatio­n allows us to hit balls to both sides of the wicket and not let them settle.”

England and New Zealand duelled in a manner suggesting their ODI rivalry picked up where it exited in 2015 after a five-match thriller.

England won 3-2 in a series that produced a then-world record 3151 runs. Little has changed in tempo, although England’s 284 for eight was light by their standards. In 29 ODI innings batting first since the World Cup, they have passed 300 on 19 occasions. A score of 285 or more had only been chased down twice previously at Seddon Park.

Latham’s effort was his highest score at home in 15 ODIs.

Taylor became the fastest New Zealand batsman to 7000 ODI runs, completing the feat in his 188th innings, faster than Stephen Fleming (237 innings) and Nathan Astle (212).

The pair seized a keyhole of opportunit­y as the outfield dew took hold. They wore down an England attack in which spinners Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali struggled for control.

Momentum was divided more equally across the England innings.

New Zealand restricted the visitors to 34 for one in a nine-over opening partnershi­p between Southee and Trent Boult.

Jason Roy (49 off 66 balls) and Joe Root (71 off 75) fought back with a second-wicket stand of 79 to take them to 89 in the 19th over.

No partnershi­p was worth more than 42 after that, but England’s batting depth paid dividends as they sustained the run rate. Buttler heaving Sodhi for three sixes in the 32nd over helped on his way to 79 off 65.

New Zealand’s best bowler, despite a lack of wickets, was Tim Southee. The right-armer finished with none for 47, including an opening maiden.

His first spell of five overs cost 14 runs, his second of two cost 10 and his death overs conceded 24, including 13 from the last. He demonstrat­ed maturity adjusting his pace and variations.

Plenty of intrigue surrounded Ben Stokes’ return for the first time since he was charged with affray after a scrap outside a Bristol nightclub in September.

He grappled to 12 off 22 balls against a mixture of pace and spin, before Santner lured him into a slog sweep from around the wicket. The ball ballooned to Taylor running to his right from backward point.

In contrast, Stokes’ bowling was tight. Pace in the high 130km/h bracket, and slower ball variations, returned two for 43 from eight overs.

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 ?? Picture / Photosport ?? Ross Taylor’s century against England last night was pivotal in New Zealand’s win.
Picture / Photosport Ross Taylor’s century against England last night was pivotal in New Zealand’s win.

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