The New Zealand Herald

Ferns’ total despair

Inability to score enough runs has proven costly for New Zealand’s World Cup hopes

- Liam Napier

The ifs, buts and maybes will haunt the White Ferns. Stand-in captain Amy Satterthwa­ite admitted as much while poring over the aftermath of New Zealand’s agonising onewicket defeat to England at Eden Park on Sunday, a result that all but ends their World Cup semifinal hopes.

Three tight pool matches — the tournament-opening three-run loss to the West Indies, the two-wicket defeat against South Africa and this latest near miss — will prove costly in the quest to reach the knockouts.

The Ferns could have reversed those defeats but they all carry the familiar theme of batting collapses and not scoring enough runs.

The roller-coaster of emotions was still raw when Satterthwa­ite, filling in for injured captain Sophie Devine, fronted after England held on for a tense victory that confined the Ferns to two wins from six games.

“If you saw our changing room, it’s difficult for everybody regardless of how experience­d, or old, or young. Everyone is devastated,” said Satterthwa­ite.

“We’re such a tight-knit group and we really believe in each other and we’ve done a lot of hard work over the past 12 to 18 months. We genuinely believed we could compete with the top teams.

“We’ll reflect on the tournament at some point, and if we’re honest, the batting was probably the thing that let us down the most.

“The ball has tried to keep us in the tournament and fought extremely hard. We can be proud of that. But putting up scores of 200 and 220-odd against world-class opposition, unfortunat­ely it’s not enough. We need to find a way to get bigger totals on the board.”

Once again, the batting shortchang­ed the White Ferns against England. They weren’t helped by losing influentia­l opener Devine, just as she was set, to a back injury.

The skipper’s departure stalled New Zealand’s innings. While she eventually returned, Devine was severely hampered and the damage was done.

Losing 8-69 was always going to be problemati­c. For a side that hinted at genuine progress in the pre-World Cup 4-1 ODI series win against India, the immediate batting regression was hard to stomach. Shot selection and game management proved consistent issues.

“The frustratin­g part is I felt we turned a corner in the series against India before this tournament. We started to put some consistent totals on the board around that 260-270 range. Everyone was playing their role superbly,” Satterthwa­ite said.

“We’ve had some things not go our way with Sophie’s injury and we lost Lauren Down coming into the tournament but I thought we would produce bigger scores than we have.

“Sometimes we possibly get ahead of ourselves and think we need more than we do.

“If we look back, there can’t be too many 80-90-100 partnershi­ps. We probably got started and didn’t have the killer instinct that put us in those strong positions to allow our middle to lower order to launch.

“We’ve made a lot of progress in the last 12 months in the way we play spin, the way we’re proactive with our feet, but there were times in this tournament, we probably let the bowlers bowl to us. In tournament­s like this, you can’t sit back.”

Having harboured visions of contesting the World Cup title on home soil, the first for 22 years, the White Ferns are instead contemplat­ing one final match against Pakistan in Christchur­ch on Saturday, and what might have been.

“You always hope you could be on the other side of those results. I’m proud of the way the group has stuck at it each game. We’ve got things in each one we’ll look back and wish we’d done better.

“Coming into a tournament like this, you always have prediction­s of where you think you should end up. It’s the funny thing about World Cups, there’s always interestin­g results on the day. Teams are showing how close the women’s game is getting now. The likes of South Africa are a well-rounded side. West Indies are extremely dangerous.

“Unfortunat­ely for us, we’ve probably got 80 per cent right against those teams but that 20 per cent has really hurt us.”

 ?? ?? Suzie Bates and the White Ferns were despondent after losing to England.
Suzie Bates and the White Ferns were despondent after losing to England.
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