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Saturday 20 June 2015

5th ODI ENG 192/7 beat NZ 283/9 by 3 wkts D/L

Wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow is named man of the match after hitting 85 runs

"It's been fantastic to come back in. The guys have put in some great performances in this series so to top it off is very special. The way the guys have gone about their business in this series is wonderful. It's good to bat with Rash - he's the most chilled man in the world. I knew we had three overs of powerplay under our belt so we wanted to take it as deep as we could and see what happens."


New Zealand batsman Kane Williamson is named man of the series.


He says: "It was an unbelievable series. England were outstanding, they deserved everything that they achieved for the style that they played. It was a great series to be a part of. I try to bat with a man at the other end and build those partnerships, and it was nice to contribute in this series. The pitches have made for great viewing and I think England will get a few more good wickets."

New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum: "It's been a tremendous series. The Test series was keenly fought and some of the cricket we've seen in this ODI series has been sensational. Both teams have played their part.

"The wicket here wasn't as quick as others but we knew any score was going to be hard to defend. Credit to England, they held their nerve under pressure. They had the series on the line but managed to stay true to their attacking philosophies.


"I'm really excited about cricket in our country. We're in a good place but we have to keep striving to get better."


England captain Eoin Morgan: "There has been some incredible cricket played over the five games. All credit to New Zealand - they've played some fantastic cricket. We've come out of left-field. Jonny Bairstow was incredible - in what was our worst batting display of the series, he stuck his hand up and won us the game.

"Everything that has happened in this series has been stuff that we've been striving for over the past few years. As we've gone around the country the support has been magnificent and we've managed to deliver some entertaining cricket.


"I had an immensely dry spell up until this series and I managed to make some contributions which was great, but it was a huge team effort. Let's hope going into the Ashes that we maintain that level."


Sam Billings tells Sky Sports

"This series has been phenomenal. It's a childhood dream, it's what you get up for every morning. It's been with a group of mates who have been fantastic. New Zealand have played some unbelievable cricket and it's been a great advertisement for ODI cricket."

Stand-in wicketkeeper Jonny Bairstow produced a nerveless display as England clinched victory in the one-day international series against New Zealand with an unlikely win in the fifth ODI at Chester-le-Street.

The enthralling first four matches had been dominated by the batsmen on both sides with big 300+ scores a regular occurrence, but today it was the bowlers who had their way.

New Zealand had averaged over 350 in the previous three matches but couldn't get close to that today as England restricted them to 283-9.

The rain then arrived at Chester-le-Street and heavily delayed the hosts' reply. Play didn't resume until 5.30pm in the evening, with Duckworth/Lewis calculating that England needed 192 from 26 overs at 7.4 an over.

Mitchell Santner ripped apart England's in-form trio of Alex Hales, Joe Root and Eoin Morgan as wickets tumbled in the early stages.

Hales was gone in the second over, pulling Santner to square leg where Kane Williamson took an acrobatic one-handed catch.

Root was then stumped by Luke Ronchi two overs later before England's leading scorer in the series, captain Eoin Morgan, went for a golden duck by finding Martin Guptill on the boundary.

Local favourite Ben Stokes was next in and he hit a quickfire 17 before driving one down the throat of Black Caps captain Brendon McCullum off the bowling of Ben Wheeler.

Jason Roy had seen four partners come and go, but he was next to depart as he gifted debutant Andrew Mathieson his first ODI wicket on his first ball at international level by looping one up for Guptill.

England had been reduced to 45-5, but all was not lost as Bairstow and Sam Billings gave the hosts some hope with a sixth-wicket partnership of 80.

The pair were dragging England towards victory but their partnership was broken when a pull from Billings off the bowling of Matt Henry was caught by the diving Ross Taylor.

David Willey was next in and added seven to the scoreboard before squirming a Wheeler delivery to Santner. Bairstow was still going strong at the other end and he saw England home with Adil Rashid.


Despite the shortened fifth match today, the series is still the first five-match ODI encounter to have more than 3,000 total runs.



ENG 192/7 (ENG win by 3 wickets D/L)

FOW: 8/1 Hales c Williamson b Santner 1

What a snag! Hales has got to go, and it's vindication for one of Brendon McCullum's zany captaincy experiments. Off-spinner Mitchell Santner is thrown the new ball, and his second delivery is short and dragged powerfully off his hips by Hales, but Williamson leaps at square leg and plucks it out of the sky. Just the start New Zealand wanted.

20/2 Root st Ronchi b Santner 4

The baby-faced Mitchell Santner is taking a wrecking ball to England's top order. He lobs up a really floaty delivery, Joe Root's eyes light up and he dances down the track, and that paves the way for Luke Ronchi to execute one of the more unorthodox stumpings of his career. The ball cannons into his chin, drops providentially into his gloves and he punches the bails off. Root trudges off; Ronchi, blood dripping from his face, screams in a mixture of pain and triumph. Big wicket.

20/3 Morgan c Guptill b Santner 0

It's like watching a DVD of 'Classic England ODI Performances'. Eoin Morgan swings his first ball out to midwicket, doesn't get hold of it, and Martin Guptill on the boundary scoops it up just above the turf. Crumbs. You'd forgotten what this felt like, hadn't you?

40/4 Stokes c B McCullum b Wheeler 17

That's a good old-fashioned brain explosion. Ben Stokes hits the first two balls of Ben Wheeler's over for four, and then aims an ungainly, unnecessary heave at the next one. The bat twists in his hand, the ball doesn't get the altitude he was hoping for, and Brendon McCullum is there at mid-off to clasp the catch above his head. Stokes walks off wielding the bat above his shoulders, as if he's going to smash it on the first thing he sees when he gets back in the changing room. Watch your laptops, lads.

45/5 Roy c Guptill b Mathieson 12

The mystery man strikes! Andrew Mathieson, plucked from the Devon and Cornwall League to play his first ODI, gets Jason Roy with his first ball! Horrible, horrible shot from Roy, seemed to be caught in two minds between flat-batting it over point and leaving it, and ended up just hanging the bat out. The ball balloons in the air and Martin Guptill pockets the catch.


125/6 Billings c Taylor b Henry 41 


Has that swung the pendulum back New Zealand's way? Billings tries to swat Matt Henry into the leg side but is foiled by an absolutely magnificent catch from Ross Taylor, flying in the air at short midwicket and taking the ball oh-so-softly in the cradle of his fingers. Huge wicket.

138/7 Willey c Santner b Henry 7

Oh, that could be costly. We knew Willey wouldn't die wondering, and having lived by the sword, he dies by it. He tries to pull a ball that gets big on him and ends up splicing it miles in the air.



Innings review by BBC Sport's James Gheerbrant 

Well well, what a remarkable late swing of momentum. England seemed to be in complete control of that innings, and then suddenly in the space of a few balls, New Zealand snuck from a very underwhelming position to one that gives them a fighting chance of winning this series.

New Zealand rebuilt after the early wicket of Brendon McCullum with some solid if not spectacular batting from Guptill, Williamson and Taylor - not quite in keeping with the wham-bam tenor of this series but enough to lay a solid foundation for a decent New Zealand score on what appears the trickiest pitch of the series.


The wickets of Taylor and Grant Elliott, who fell to the very impressive Adil Rashid, looked to have turned things decisively in England's favour, and when Luke Ronchi departed to leave New Zealand 219-7, a sub-par score looked on the cards. But that was before Wheeler's explosive intervention...

Bowling figures: Finn 10-0-73-2, Willey 10-0-50-2, Wood 10-0-60-0, Stokes 10-0-52-3, Rashid 10-0-45-2.

NZ 283/9

FOW: 7/1 McCullum b Finn 6 

It's all happened in the opening over. One ball after smashing Steve Finn for six to long-on, Brendon McCullum has gone. Finn bowls one that comes back a tad, but not a great deal, and McCullum is nowhere near it as it flies into his off stump.

101/2 Williamson b Stokes 50

Just as we're singing his praises, the leading run scorer in the series plays on to his stumps and is back in the pavilion.

150/3 Guptill c Bairstow b Stokes 67 

We've seen Martin Guptill do this a few times in this series - he grinds his way to 70-odd and then gift-wraps his wicket with a big bow on top. It's a back of a length ball in the corridor from Stokes and Guptill has a horrible lazy waft at it, giving the recalled Jonny Bairstow an easy pouch. Timely wicket for England.

155/4 Santner b Rashid 2

Rashid has his revenge, and England have foiled New Zealand's dastardly plan! Mitchell Santner was sent up the order to deliver a bit of biff, but his first sortie down the wicket sees him aim a big airy swish at the ball, which turns back through the gate and rocks back leg pole! Lovely wicket for Rashid, did him up like a kipper. England on top?

210/5 Elliot st Bairstow b Rashid 35

Rashid is brought back into the attack to defuse this potentially explosive partnership. And he does the job! Three balls after Elliott is dropped by Morgan, the batsman dances down the track, misses the googly and doesn't even bother to look back in anguish and Jonny Bairstow whips off the bails.

212/6 Taylor c Bairstow b Willey 47 

New Zealand are collapsing like a sandcastle when the tide comes in. Ross Taylor is the latest man to go, pushing at a full away-swinger and getting an outside edge that is really well taken by a tumbling Jonny Bairstow. No question that England are in charge of this game now.

219/7 Ronchi c Morgan b Willey 2

England are doing a fine job of mopping up this New Zealand innings. The dangerous Luke Ronchi - New Zealand's main hope of getting a competitive total - is gone, lofting David Willey to mid-off and giving Eoin Morgan a leaping catch above his head.

244/8 Southee b Stokes 18 

Tim Southee's fun is over. He smites nine off Ben Stokes's over but then misses a leg-stump half-volley and sees his furniture rearranged.

267/9 Henry c Stokes b Finn 12

Henry tries to repeat the trick, skies it miles in the air, and is caught by Ben Stokes. It's time for the mystery man!



England won the toss & will bowl

England: Hales, Roy, Root, Morgan, Stokes, Bairstow, Billings, Rashid, Willey, Wood, Finn.

New Zealand: Guptill, McCullum, Williamson, Taylor, Elliott, Santner, Ronchi, Wheeler, Henry, Southee, Mathieson.

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