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England beat New Zealand by 50 runs
CHRISTCHURCH (New Zealand)—England again outclassed New Zealand when
Paul Collingwood and Owais Shah reversed a batting slump to engineer a
50-run win in their Twenty20 match here Thursday.
England posted 193 for eight and a demoralised New Zealand could only
manage 143 for eight in reply. The win wrapped up the festival section
of the tour for England 2-0, giving them a psychological edge as they
head into a series of five one-day matches starting on Saturday followed
by three Tests next month.
But the second Twenty20 victory was not as clinical as the first
encounter when England fielded the same team and most batsmen
contributed to their 32-run victory on Tuesday. This time New Zealand
were able to force an England top order slump before Collingwood and
Shah regained the ascendancy.
After a rollicking start by Luke Wright and Phil Mustard, who clouted 65
in 5.5 overs, the next 15 deliveries saw England lose four wickets for
11 runs to be 76 for four.
Teenaged paceman Tim Southee, 19, who is being blooded by New Zealand as
a talent of the future, claimed the prized scalps of Mustard (40) and
Kevin Pietersen (three). Chris Martin bowled Wright for 30 and Ian Bell
was run out for one going for a quick single on a misfield.
But if New Zealand thought they had England on the ropes they were
quickly corrected as Shah and Collingwood put on 102 in 62 balls for the
fifth wicket. Captain Collingwood had five fours and three sixes in his
54 off 28 deliveries while Shah faced 35 balls for 47 including four
fours and two sixes.
Both fell in consecutive balls from Paul Hitchcock — Shah caught at deep
long off and Collingwood at deep long on, bringing in the powerful
Dmitri Mascarenhas who avoided the hat-trick with a six. Collingwood
rated the England performance better than in the first match because of
the way they recovered.
“We lost four quick wickets in the middle but we got the momentum back
and that was important and the boys carried it on through the innings
and that was a massive total,” he said. “There’s so many positives that
have come out of it and hopefully we can take that kind of form into the
one-day series. We’ve got five very important games coming up and we can
take a lot of confidence from these two wins.” A dejected New Zealand
captain Brendon McCullum said his side needed to be more accurate all
round to be competitive.
“To be on the receiving end of another hiding was very disappointing,”
he said. “After we pulled back the initial onslaught I thought we were
setting ourselves up for a 150-160 chase but two experienced guys put
together a very, very good partnership which sent them to a score which
was well beyond our reach.”
New Zealand started their chase for 194 to win with a Jesse Ryder
boundary off the first ball but lost their way soon after. Halfway
through the innings they were four wickets down and well behind on the
run rate with only 72 on the board.
Without Jacob Oram, who brought some respectability to New Zealand’s
first match performance, the home side had little chance of a late run
fest. Jamie How top scored with 31, Kyle Mills was not out 30 and Ross
Taylor made 21 but no one appeared at ease against a tight bowling
attack.
Ryan Sidebottom was again miserly with two for 19 off his four overs
while Mascarenhas finished with two for 25 and Graeme Swann two for
30.—Agencies |