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Sunday 2 June 2013

2nd ODI England v New Zealand

NZ 359/3 beat Eng 273 by 86 runs & win series 2-0

FOW: Cook b Mills 34 (50/1), Bell c Franklin b Bracewell 25 (64/2),
Root c Bracewell b NL McCullum 28 (122/3), Morgan c Ronchi b Elliott 21 (166/4),
Buttler c Guptill b McClenaghan 2 (169/5), Woakes st †Ronchi b Williamson 13 (212/6), Bresnan run out 0 (213/7), Swann b Williamson 1 (218/8),
Anderson b McClenaghan 28 (265/9), Dernbach c Mills b McClenaghan 2 (273/10)

New Zealand 359 for 3 (Guptill 189*, Taylor 60, Williamson 55) beat England 273 (Trott 109*) by 86 runs
A record-breaking day from Martin Guptill earned New Zealand another one-day trophy on English soil with an 86-run victory at the Ageas Bowl. Less than 48 hours after leading his side home at Lord's, Guptill plundered New Zealand's highest individual one-day innings with a monumental, unbeaten 189 which left England shell-shocked and reflecting on their first home ODI series loss since 2009.

Guptill, who went past the previous individual mark of 172 by Lou Vincent against Zimbabwe during the penultimate over of the innings, provided more than half of New Zealand's overwhelming total of 359 for 3 - the second-highest conceded by England after the 387 for 5 in Rajkot in 2006. Agonisingly for England, like at Lord's, they offered him a life on 13, when Jonathan Trott - who later scored a 98-ball hundred - spilled a relatively straightforward catch at midwicket, although it proved more costly than anyone could have imagined.
 
The final 10 overs of New Zealand's innings were carnage, costing 132 runs, as Guptill and Brendon McCullum brought up their hundred stand - the third of the innings - in just 45 deliveries as England's bowling was scattered to all corners. Guptill's hundred had come off 111 deliveries; the final 44 balls of his stay brought 89 runs and six of the last seven deliveries he faced went for four.
 
He equalled Viv Richards' 189 at Old Trafford in 1984 as the highest innings against England in an ODI and Guptill's two hundreds in three days was also a repeat of the feat achieved by Mark Greatbatch, the only other New Zealand batsman to score a one-day ton in England, when he notched back-to-back landmarks in 1990.

Two partnerships formed the bedrock of the New Zealand innings which allowed the later onslaught: Guptill and Kane Williamson added 120 for the second wicket, then Ross Taylor joined in a third-wicket alliance worth 109 in 17 overs as the innings accelerated. Not that Taylor's departure slowed things down as Guptill and McCullum ensured mayhem in the closing overs.
 
Apart from James Anderson first spell, England's bowling was disappointing throughout, occasionally verging on woeful, albeit on the best batting surface of the international season so far, coupled with a lightning fast outfield. Jade Dernbach's 10-over spell for 87 was the fourth-most expensive return by an England bowler in an ODI.

Anderson, whose two scalps put him level with Darren Gough as England's leading ODI wicket-taker, made a deceptive early breakthrough for England by knocking back Luke Ronchi's middle stump to continue his lean start with the bat. Tim Bresnan, who is waiting on news of his heavily pregnant wife, was also economical with the new ball as England kept control during the first Powerplay; New Zealand were 36 for 1. It added further heady context to what happened during the rest of the innings.
 
Woakes, after suffering the dropped catch off his bowling for the second time in three days, sent down another expensive opening spell which cost 29 as New Zealand's second-wicket pair increased the tempo. Both Guptill and Williamson timed the ball beautifully square of the wicket particularly off the back foot.

Joe Root was the first spin option used by England and when Graeme Swann was introduced his first ball was crunched through cover by Guptill. They continued to milk him for a run-a-ball. 
 
Williamson, who fell for a duck two days ago, completed an unfussy half-century off 59 balls, his tally of three fours highlighting the efficient running which kept the pressure firmly on England - a point hammered home when Guptill dismissively pulled Woakes for six off the front foot - before Williamson bottom-edged a pull off Swann into his stumps.
 
Taylor took time to play himself in; he used 28 balls to reach 21, then clubbed 39 off his next 26 deliveries which included two sixes, one from a full toss by Bresnan, then a second with a trademark bottom-hand flick against Anderson. He fell next ball attempting a repeat but the damage had only just started for England's bowlers.

With the quality of the pitch, speed of the outfield and new fielding restrictions it was not beyond the realms of possibility that England could have made a decent stab at creating history themselves. But, with the exception of Trott who made his fourth one-day hundred 13 balls quicker than it took Guptill, the top order continued in the wasteful vain they had shown at Lord's with four of the top five falling between 21 and 34.

Alastair Cook had collected five crisp boundaries before losing his middle stump to Kyle Mills; Ian Bell's frustrating season continued when he spliced a drive to mid-off; Root picked out long-on and Eoin Morgan, a player capable of matching the pyrotechnics of Guptill and McCullum, swiped across the line in Grant Elliott's first over to feather an edge to Ronchi.
 
Although the match was always under New Zealand's control during the chase, McCullum's proactive captaincy was again to be admired. Elliott taking a wicket in his first over owed plenty to good fortune, but it also needed the captain to delve into the options he had available and pace off the ball is rarely a bad ploy to England's middle order. Neither did he let the game drift, immediately recalling the sharp Mitchell McClenaghan when Morgan and Jos Buttler came to the crease; at Lord's the reward was Morgan's wicket, here Buttler drove McClenaghan's first ball back to short cover.
 
Trott, who received a huge cheer when he straight-drove James Franklin for his third six in ODIs, played the anchor role that he is made for but it was a forlorn effort as the strokemakers departed around him.
 
Although this is their first home series defeat under Cook, with the Champions Trophy just days away there is much to ponder for England who are struggling to cover for the absence of Stuart Broad and Steven Finn and whose strengths appear somewhat nullified on flat pitches when the sun comes out. New Zealand, on the other hand, have looked a world away from the No. 8-ranked ODI side.

25 overs England 143 for 3 (Trott 39*, Morgan 10*) need a further 217 runs to beat New Zealand 359 for 3 (Guptill 189*, Taylor 60, Williamson 55)

England's attempt to chase down 360 to keep the series alive was already feeling forlorn at the midway point with their top-order batsmen continuing to struggle to build on starts. Although 143 for 3 represented a decent scoring rate the requirement was already approaching nine an over.

Alastair Cook and Ian Bell began brightly, bringing up the fifty in the eighth over, with Cook especially fluent as he collected five boundaries. However, Kyle Mills stunted England's progress when he knocked back Cook's middle stump. Three overs later Bell's frustrating season continued when he advanced down at Doug Bracewell to drive over the top - as he had done in the previous over against Mills - but got the ball high on the bat to find mid-off.

It meant Joe Root and Jonathan Trott were in the middle having not faced a ball, needing to play themselves in but also knowing the asking rate was climbing sharply. There was a seven-over period without a boundary until Trott late-cut Nathan McCullum two balls after being given a life when Luke Ronchi missed a simple stumping chance.

Root had managed to tick over at near a run-a-ball and collected his first boundary with a punchy lofted drive, also off McCullum, before the crowd was brought to its feet when Trott struck James Franklin for a straight six.

However, just as the partnership was moving into another gear Root tried to follow Trott's lead and clear the straight boundary but only managed to pick out long-on. Eoin Morgan has had precious little middle time since returning from the IPL and was now faced with having to produce something to match the earlier pyrotechnics from Martin Guptill and Brendon McCullum.

NZ 359/3 50 overs
 
FOW: WICKET Ronchi b Anderson 2 (NZ 12-1), Williamson b Swann 55 (132/2),
Taylor c Woakes b Anderson 60 (241/3)

New Zealand 359 for 3 (Guptill 189*, Taylor 60, Williamson 55) v England

Martin Guptill made the highest score by a New Zealand batsman in one-day cricket - his second hundred in three days - and his monumental, unbeaten 189 powered the visitors to a mammoth 359 for 3 at the Ageas Bowl which left England a huge task to avoid their first home ODI series defeat since 2009.

Guptill went past the previous individual mark of 172 by Lou Vincent against Zimbabwe during the penultimate over of the innings. The final 10 overs were carnage, costing 132 runs, as Guptill and Brendon McCullum brought up their hundred stand - the third of the innings - in just 45 deliveries as England's bowling was scattered to all corners.
 
As at Lord's, Guptill was dropped. Here he was on 13 when he pulled Chris Woakes to midwicket where Jonathan Trott spilled a head-height catch. And as at Lord's he made England pay with a century in 111 balls - his fourth in ODIs. He equalled Viv Richards' 189 at Old Trafford in 1984 as the highest innings against England in an ODI.

His two hundreds in three days was also a repeat of the feat achieved by Mark Greatbatch, the only other New Zealand batsman to score a one-day ton in England, when he notched back-to-back landmarks in 1990.

Two partnerships formed the bedrock of the New Zealand innings which allowed the later onslaught: Guptill and Kane Williamson added 120 for the second wicket, then Ross Taylor joined in a third-wicket alliance worth 109 in 17 overs as the innings accelerated. Not that Taylor's departure slowed things down as Guptill and McCullum ensured mayhem in the closing overs with the last 18 balls costing 54 runs.
 
Apart from James Anderson first spell, England's bowling was disappointing throughout, occasionally verging on woeful, albeit on the best batting surface of the international season so far, coupled with a lightning fast outfield.
 
Anderson made an early breakthrough for England by knocking back Luke Ronchi's middle stump to continue his lean start with the bat. Tim Bresnan, who is waiting in news of his heavily pregnant wife, was also economical with the new ball as England kept control during the first Powerplay but that wasn't to last.
 
Woakes, after suffering a dropped catch off his bowling for the second time in three days, sent down another expensive opening spell which cost 29 as New Zealand's second-wicket pair increased the tempo. Both Guptill and Williamson timed the ball beautifully square of the wicket - particularly off the back foot - although Guptill nearly picked out mid-off when he drove Woakes uppishly but it would have taken a super-human leap from Alastair Cook to intercept.

Joe Root was the first spin option used by England and when Graeme Swann did come on his first ball was crunched through cover by Guptill. Williamson, who fell for a duck two days ago, completed an unfussy half-century off 59 balls, his tally of three fours highlighting the efficient running which kept the pressure firmly on England - a point hammered home when Guptill dismissively pulled Woakes for six off the front foot - before Williamson bottom-edged a pull off Swann into his stumps.
 
Taylor took time to play himself in; he used 28 balls to reach 21, then clubbed 39 off his next 26 deliveries which included two sixes, one from a full toss by Bresnan, then a second with a trademark bottom-hand flick against Anderson. He fell next ball attempting a repeat - Woakes having an age to wait for the ball to drop to him at deep square-leg - but the damage had been done.

Guptill just kept on going. He went from 100 to 150 in 30 deliveries, his second six just clearing Root at long-on when he lofted Swann, and six of the last seven balls he faced went to the boundary. England were left shell-shocked.

25 overs New Zealand 132 for 2 (Guptill 70*, Taylor 0*) v England

Martin Guptill continued the form he showed at Lord's - making use of a reprieve handed to him on 13 - with an unbeaten half-century as he and Kane Williamson gave New Zealand a strong foundation at the Ageas Bowl. The second-wicket stand of 120 put the visitors on track for a substantial total in ideal batting conditions even though Williamson fell to Graeme Swann.

James Anderson made an early breakthrough for England, knocking back Luke Ronchi's middle stump, to move to within two of overtaking Darren Gough as their leading ODI wicket-taker. Tim Bresnan, who is waiting for news of when his wife goes into labour, was also economical with the new ball as England kept control during the first Powerplay but that wasn't to last.
 
Guptill should have fallen for 13 but was dropped at midwicket by Jonathan Trott when he pulled Chris Woakes. It was not England's only lapse as poor ground fielding also gave away runs. Woakes, who also suffered when Guptill was dropped at Lord's early in his hundred, delivered another expensive opening spell, which went for 29, as New Zealand's second-wicket pair increased the tempo.
 
On a lightning-fast outfield, both Guptill and Williamson timed the ball beautifully square of the wicket - particularly off the back foot - although Guptill nearly picked out mid-off when he drove Woakes uppishly but it would have taken a super-human leap from Alastair Cook to intercept.
 
Joe Root was the first spin option used by England and when Swann did come on his first ball was crunched through cover by Guptill on his way to a 61-ball fifty. Guptill had a few moments of fortune shortly afterwards, getting an outside edge through the vacant slip area off Swann and then top-edging a pull off Jade Dernbach which looped over midwicket.
 
Williamson, who fell for a duck two days ago, completed an unfussy half-century off 59 balls, his tally of three fours highlighting the efficient running which kept the pressure firmly on England - a point hammered home when Guptill dismissively pulled Woakes for six off the front foot - before Williamson bottom-edged a pull off Swann into his stumps.
 
Despite the defeat at Lord's, England retained an unchanged team which meant no debut for Boyd Rankin after he was called into the squad to cover for the injuries to Stuart Broad (knee) and Steven Finn (shin). New Zealand rested Tim Southee which gave Doug Bracewell and opportunity.
 
If New Zealand secure the trophy here it will be England's first home series defeat since losing 6-1 to Australia in 2009.
 
NZ won toss & will bat first
 
England Alastair Cook (capt), Ian Bell, Jonathan Trott, Joe Root, Eoin Morgan, Jos Buttler (wk), Chris Woakes, Tim Bresnan, Graeme Swann, James Anderson, Jade Dernbach

New Zealand Luke Ronchi (wk), Martin Guptill, Kane Williamson, Ross Taylor, Grant Elliott, Brendon McCullum (capt), James Franklin, Nathan McCullum, Doug Bracewell, Kyle Mills, Mitchell McClenaghan.

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