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New Zealand thrash dismal England
Wellington—New Zealand bounced back from the disappointment of losing
both Twenty20s against England, with an emphatic six-wicket win in the
first one-dayer in Wellington. England were put on the back foot right
from the outset, limping to a feeble 130 which New Zealand knocked off
with 20 overs to spare.
The contrast between the two sides couldn’t have been greater following
the Twenty20s. Gone were Dimitri Mascarenhas and Luke Wright; in came
Ravi Bopara and Alastair Cook. Both are perfectly decent replacements,
but why did England change a winning side? The Wellington pitch was
stodgy, the New Zealand bowling miserly and accurate, and England simply
couldn’t force the pace, perfectly illustrated by their boundary count
of seven fours. Poor running and a trio of run-outs completed a dismal
effort.
New Zealand were proficient from the word go. Chasing such a meagre
total can often play tricks with batting sides, but Brendon McCullum and
Jesse Ryder ensured there were no hiccups with a dominant opening stand
of 61. In the past week Ryder has attracted a lot of media attention for
his expansive waistline, but today he went some way to dispelling the
theory that chubbiness is a barrier to success with an invigorating 31
from 50 balls. His first boundary was flicked nonchalantly over
midwicket for six; his first two fours flayed with immense power past
point and through the leg side.
But there is more to Ryder than his obvious power, with deft glances to
leg and a solid defensive technique to the seamers. Meanwhile McCullum
was almost too aggressive for his own good - charging the bowlers and
upper-cutting without care to third man - and took a while to settle
down before lofting Ryan Sidebottom for the shot of the day, a lovely
lofted six over long-on. The pair’s fifty partnership took 64 balls; in
contrast, England’s took 95.
Ryder’s confidence spilled over when he tried to pull Stuart Broad into
the midwicket stand and was easily caught by Wright, while McCullum was
strangled down the leg side. New Zealand, though, were never in any
serious danger. England had already lost the match with the bat.
England were utterly unable to force the pace or time the ball, and New
Zealand’s bowlers - in particular Scott Styris and Chris Martin -
capitalised impressively, taking full advantage of a helpful pitch.
England hit just seven fours in their innings - testament to the
excellence of New Zealand’s ability to adapt to the conditions. Martin
and Kyle Mills both bowled immaculate opening spells - Martin
exclusively around the wicket - and from very early on, it was obvious
this wasn’t a pitch for extravagant strokeplay. However, Phil Mustard
couldn’t always rein in his attacking instincts, twice inside-edging
Martin with ugly leg-side swings. Just when England looked to have
adapted to the conditions, Cook was bowled by Martin with the
penultimate ball of the 10th over, by which time England were 34 for 1.
Ian Bell and Kevin Pietersen both inside-edged onto the stumps, while
Mustard crept further into his shell before Styris bowled him for a
laborious 31. The pitch was tailor-made for Styris, in particular, who
bowled a perfect line and length, mixing up his off-cutters with slower
balls and a medley of other variations to pick up his most economical
figures in one-dayers.
And then came the run-outs, to further compound England’s woes. New
Zealand were electric in the field from the outset - that much is true -
but England didn’t help their cause one little bit, with Owais Shah
involved in all three. The first was a particularly playground effort,
ball-watching to leave Paul Collingwood stranded. Graeme Swann was also
run out, before Shah’s dozy running cost him his own wicket - and
England’s innings was as good as finished.
New Zealand marshalled the game from the outset - remarkable, really,
given how emphatically they were outplayed in the last week. It has
enlivened what was being billed as a potentially one-sided series.
Summarized Scores: New Zealand 131 for 4 (McCullum 42, Taylor 24*) beat
England 130 (Mustard 31, Martin 2-22, Styris 2-22) by six wickets |