Black Caps beat Pakistan to win series
An incisive bowling display by Matt Henry and composed batting from
Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor has secured the one-day international
series against Pakistan 3-2 and broken the deadlock between the teams
across all formats over the past six weeks in the United Arab Emirates.
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Kane Williamson a composed 97 for the Kiwis |
The test series was drawn 1-1 as was the T20 contest and, leading
into the final ODI in Abu Dhabi, the teams had won two games apiece. New
Zealand's win is their fourth ODI series triumph in the past two years
after previous triumphs over South Africa, England and India.
New Zealand won the toss and posted 275 for four, including just 100
runs in boundaries. However, if boundaries were rare for New Zealand,
they were statistical outliers for Pakistan who scored one in the first
25 overs in front of a sizable crowd on Friday, the customary day off in
the UAE. New Zealand won by 68 runs after bowling Pakistan out for 207
with Henry taking five for 30 from nine overs. Only Ahmed Shehzad with
54 and Haris Sohail with 65 offered significant resistance. Henry's
five-wicket bag was his first in ODIs and his third haul of four wickets
or better in six outings as he heaped further pressure on the selectors
to pick him for the World Cup.
Once Shahid Afridi holed out to Taylor for 13 at deep mid-wicket to
make it 205 for nine, the match was all but over, or at least the crowd
thought so, as they stormed the exits. Any chance at early Pakistani
momentum was stymied when Nasir Jamshed was adjudged lbw in the first
over.
It's the third time Henry had completed such a feat in the series. He
backed up with the dismissal of Younis Khan who gloved a loose delivery
down the legside for 12. A useful spell of left-arm orthodox bowling
from Anton Devcich saw him trap Asad Shafiq lbw four overs later to
reduce Pakistan to 38 for three. New Zealand have a strong one-day
international batting line-up but their performance revolves around
anchors Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor.
The pair again proved what a tour de force they can be, leading the
visitors through the middle overs. The latest effort saw them fulfil
what New Zealand must hope is a default scenario when the World Cup
starts in 56 days.
They combined in the 20th over and made a fourth century partnership
(116) in their last eight ODI innings together.
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Matt Henry carved through the Pakistan batting with 5 for 3
in 9 overs |
A lack of boundaries (7) was compensated by 83 singles to sustain a
run rate of 5.04. Williamson was caught behind on 97, deflecting a sweep
onto his helmet off Afridi, Pakistan's talisman during the series.
He finished with one for 33 from 10 overs. Taylor negotiated the
remainder of the innings to finish on 88 not out..
The pair now have the second and third highest averages in New
Zealand ODI history (Williamson 43.51 and Taylor 41.26), behind Glenn
Turner's 47.
They've batted together 23 times in the 50-over format and average
56.04. What they missed in match fitness against South Africa has been
regained in the UAE. Martin Guptill was dismissed for eight in the third
over but Dean Brownlie offered another solid start.
He has had a frustrating tour with his inability to anchor the
innings, an issue which extends to the one-dayers against South Africa
when he batted at No 3. His scores of 20, 24, 14, 47, 42 and 34 since
returning to the ODI frame in October suggest he's competent at
international level. However, with Guptill and Brendon McCullum likely
to open at the World Cup, Brownlie might stay on the periphery for now.
New Zealand brought Nathan McCullum and Devcich back into the team
for Daniel Vettori and Corey Anderson. Vettori was flying home for his
brother's wedding while Anderson and Jimmy Neesham were ruled out with
groin injuries. Two local players acted as substitute fielders.
"It was such an up and down series and very tough but it's good to
win against Pakistan," said Williamson.. "It was fantastic to learn from
the Pakistan side and ultimately win such an evenly fought series,"
Williamson said.
"The (Pakistan) middle-order has shown how powerful they are and to
not let them get on top of us (today) has been brilliant." Afridi found
enough positives despite the loss with the World Cup in February and
March fast approaching. "I congratulate New Zealand for the win," said
Afridi, who deputised for Misbah-ul Haq, injured in the second game. "We
have quite a few positives but our fielding needs to improve before the
World Cup."
"The wickets of Ahmed Shehzad and Haris Sohail were crucial and their
dismissals put us on the backfoot," Afridi said. "Bowlers bowled well,
but we still gave away an extra 15-20 runs and later we lacked
partnerships in batting." -NZ Herald
SCOREBOARD
New Zealand innings
Martin Guptill c Shafiq b Irfan 08
Dean Brownlie lbw Babar 34
Kane Williamson c Ahmed b Afridi 97
Ros Taylor not out 88
Luke Ronchi Afridi b Irfan 16
Tom Latham not out 22
Extras (lb 5, w 5) 10
TOTAL (4 wickets; 50 overs) 275
Fall of wickets: 1-20 (Guptill), 2-86 (Brownlie)
3-202 (Williamson), 4-241 (Ronchi)
Bowling: Mohammad Irfan 10-0-62-2
Zulfiqar Babar 10-0-61-1
Shahid Afridi 10-0-33-1
Anwar Ali 10-0-62-0
Haris Sohail 8-0-38-0
Ahmed Shehzad 2-0-14-0
Pakistan innings
Nasir Jamshed lbw b Henry 00
Ahmed Shehzad c Williamson b Henry 54
Younis Khan c Ronchi b Henry 12
Asad Shafiq lbw b Devcich 07
Haris Sohail b McClenaghan 65
Umar Akmal c Guptill b McCullum 06
Sarfraz Ahmed c Ronchi b Henry 26
Shahid Afrifi c Taylor b Henry 13
Anwar Ali st Ronchi b McCullum 18
Zulfiqar Babar b Milne 02
Mohammad Irfan not out 00
Extras (b 1, lb 2, w 1) 04
TOTAL (all out; 43.3 overs) 207
Fall of wickets: 1-0 (Jamshed), 2-22 (Khan), 3-38 (Shafiq)
4-107 (Shehzad), 5-117 (Akmal), 6-172 (Sohail)
7-174 (Ahmed), 8-194 (Ali), 9-205 (Afridi)
10-207 (Babar)
Bowling: Matt Henry 9-1-3-5
Adam Milne 6.3-0-30-1
Mitchell McClenaghan 8-0-45-1
Anton Devcich 6-0-22-1
Kane Williamson 5-0-18-0
Nathan McCullum 9-0-59-2 |