The Citizen (KZN)

Aussies blitz Kiwis

DECIDER: ALL SQUARE WITH WINNER-TAKE-ALL BLOCKBUSTE­R TOMORROW

- Wellington

Australia crushed New Zealand by 50 runs in a low-scoring fourth Twenty20 internatio­nal in Wellington yesterday to level the series at 2-2. The result sets up a winnertake­s-all blockbuste­r in the final match at the same venue tomorrow, with Australia in red-hot form after struggling early in the series.

The Australian­s scored 156/6 in their 20 overs after winning the toss and electing to bat.

In reply, New Zealand were all out for 106 after 18.5 overs.

Captain Aaron Finch anchored the tourists’ innings with a gritty 79, making him Australia’s most prolific T20 internatio­nal run-scorer on 2 310, ahead of David Warner’s 2 265.

Finch chiselled out his 14th T20 half-century off 55 balls before cutting loose with four sixes in the final over, in which Kyle Jamieson conceded 26 runs.

But he struggled for partners as the Black Caps pinned back Australia’s batters with accurate bowling and a steady flow of wickets.

Despite his Man-of-the-Match batting performanc­e, Finch singled out his bowling attack for praise, saying they were outstandin­g on a wicket that did noy play as expected.

“I thought we adapted really well, it was a really polished performanc­e with the ball,” he said.

Paceman Kyle Richardson ended with the best figures of 3/19, but spinners Ashton Agar,

Adam Zampa and Glenn Maxwell all contribute­d with two wickets each.

Leg-spinner Ish Sodhi was the pick of the New Zealand bowlers, claiming 3/32.

The Black Caps made a slow start, with openers Martin Guptill and Tim Seifert managing just one boundary apiece in the opening three overs on a spin-friendly wicket.

Guptill (seven) departed cheaply but it was only the beginning of New Zealand’s woes as they lost a further six wickets for 30 runs.

The collapse effectivel­y ended the contest, despite some tailend resistance from Jamieson, who top-scored for the Black Caps with 30.

New Zealand skipper Kane Williamson was frustrated at a passive display that he said needed to improve for the decider.

“That was a pretty poor performanc­e from us, particular­ly in the second half,” he said.

“We lacked a little bit of intent at times.”

 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? MASTER BLASTER. Australian captain Aaron Finch strokes the ball to the fence during the fourth T20 against New Zealand at Sky Stadium in Wellington yesterday.
Picture: Getty Images MASTER BLASTER. Australian captain Aaron Finch strokes the ball to the fence during the fourth T20 against New Zealand at Sky Stadium in Wellington yesterday.

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