Bangkok Post

Kiwis well-equipped to fire

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WELLINGTON: When South Africa rolled New Zealand for 45 in a Test innings two years ago little did they know they had also sown the seeds for the Black Caps to become strong contenders for the 2015 World Cup.

Notables such as South African skipper AB de Villiers and India’s Rahul Dravid head a worldwide chorus of prediction­s that New Zealand, playing on home wickets through to the semi-finals, will be in the final four at least.

Such sound support reflects the depth of talent building within a squad producing consistent performanc­es far removed from the innings in South Africa which ignited deep soul searching by the New Zealanders.

It may have been a Test match but it brought an across the board shake up of player attitudes with New Zealand’s oneday unit developing into a fiercely competitiv­e unit.

The pattern of a top-order failure leading to an innings collapse has been replaced by a culture where they believe they can beat any team; the image of a side filled with individual agendas has been turned into a “team effort” ethos.

“You can’t have a team-first mentality if only a few people are buying into it. When you have players sacrificin­g their own personal records for what the team needs, that’s what it’s all about,” says coach Mike Hesson.

As a result captain Brendon McCullum takes his side into the World Cup off the back of a series wins against Sri Lanka and Pakistan in the past month, and a reputation as team that fights to the end.

In 2012, the year prior to the frank selfanalys­is, New Zealand had a disappoint­ing 4-10 ODI win-loss record.

After the South Africa debacle, it improved to 7-10 in 2013 and progressed to the right side of the ledger at 9-5 last year.

They have won four of their past five series and three times in the past two years New Zealand have successful­ly chased down a target of more than 250 — beating India, Pakistan and England — as they worked on their World Cup strategy.

“It’s nice to win games when you’re under the pump and that’s something we pride ourselves on,” says Hesson.

“Chasing under pressure is important. We’re going to have a lot of chases in the next few months and we’re going to be in pressure situations.”

 ?? AFP ?? New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum.
AFP New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum.

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