Showing posts with label Seddon Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seddon Park. Show all posts

Sunday, March 28, 2021

Virat-led India (Ki)win the series

India made no changes to their playing eleven.

New Zealand made just one change to the eleven that last played the Indians – Blair Tickner made way for Scott Kuggeleijn.

On winning the toss, Kane Williamson, New Zealand’s skipper, inserted the visitors.

The Powerplay of India’s innings – which was the mandatory Powerplay – was between the first and the sixth over. Their openers put on 69.

India put on 50 off 5.3 overs (33 balls). New Zealand hadn’t conceded any extras at that point. While the contribution of Rohit, the player of the (Shar)match, to the partnership was 36, Lokesh Rahul’s contribution to it was 19.

Rahul, whose 19-ball (Col)innings included a couple of boundaries and a six, eventually scored 27. Nine overs into the match, he was caught by Munro. Colin de Grandhomme broke the 89-run partnership.

Sharma’s half-century – which included five boundaries and three sixes – came off 23 balls. He eventually scored 65 off 40 balls, which included half-a-dozen boundaries, in addition to the aforementioned number of sixes. Ten balls later, he was caught by Tim Southee. Hamish Bennett broke the five-run stand.

Shivam Dube had no reason to be in seventh heaven – he scored just three. A couple of balls later, he was caught by Ish Sodhi. Bennett broke the run-a-ball stand.

India scored 100 off 12.1 overs (73 balls). New Zealand had conceded a couple of extras at that point.

Shreyas Iyer, whose 16-ball innings included a six, scored 17. Half-a-dozen balls later, he was caught by Tim Seifert. Mitchell Santner broke the 46-run stand.

India scored 150 off 17.5 overs (107 balls). New Zealand had conceded three extras at that point.

Virat Kohli, India’s skipper, scored 38. His 27-ball innings included a couple of boundaries and a six. Eleven balls later, he was caught by Southee. Bennett broke the 18-run stand.

Manish Pandey, whose six-ball innings included a boundary and a six, scored 14. He was unbeaten.

Ravindra Jadeja, whose five-ball innings included a six, was unbea‘ten’.

New Zealand eventually conceded five extras. India scored 179 for the loss of five wickets off 20 overs.

Kuggeleijn, who bowled a couple of overs, conceded 10. He was wicketless, as were Southee and Sodhi, who bowled four wicketless overs apiece. While the former conceded 39, the latter conceded 23.

De Grandhomme, who bowled a couple of overs, conceded 13. He picked up a wicket, as was Santner, who bowled four overs, conceding 37. Bennett, who bowled four overs, conceded 54. He picked up three scalps.

The Powerplay of New Zealand’s innings – which was the mandatory Powerplay – was between the first and the sixth over. They scored 51, and lost a wicket.

Guptill, whose 21-ball (Mart)innings included a couple of boundaries and three sixes, scored 31. Thirty-four balls into the chase, he was caught by the substitute, Sanju Samson. Shardul Thakur broke the 47-run stand.

New Zealand scored 50 off 5.5 overs (35 balls). India had conceded half-a-dozen extras at that point.

Munro, whose 16-ball innings included a couple of boundaries, scored 14. Four balls after Guptill’s dismissal, he was stumped by Rahul. Jadeja broke the five-run stand.

Santner, whose 11-ball innings included a boundary, scored nine. Twenty-six balls later, Yuzvendra Chahal broke the 36-run stand.

New Zealand scored 100 off 12.4 overs (76 balls). The number of extras they had conceded at that point gave India no reason to be in seventh heaven.

Williamson’s half-century – which included four boundaries and three sixes – came off 28 balls.

The fourth-wicket pair put on 50 off 30 balls. While Williamson’s contribution to the partnership was 44, de Grandhomme’s contribution to it was five. Extras’ contribution to the partnership was a run.

De Grandhomme, who faced a dozen balls, didn’t add to the aforementioned score. Thirty-two balls after Santner’s dismissal, he was caught by Dube. Thakur broke the 50-run stand.

New Zealand scored 150 off 17 overs (102 balls). The number of extras they had conceded at that point gave India no reason to be in seventh heaven.

Williamson, whose 48-ball innings included eight boundaries and half-a-dozen sixes, eventually scored 95. Twenty-one balls after de Grandhomme’s dismissal, he was caught by Rahul. Mohammed Shami broke the 41-run stand.

Ross Taylor, whose 10-ball innings included a boundary and a six, scored 17. Three balls later, Shami broke the one-run stand.

Seifert, who faced a couple of balls, didn’t get off the mark. He was unbeaten.

India eventually conceded eight extras. New Zealand scored 179 for the loss of six wickets off 20 overs. The match ended in a tie. Dube, who bowled an over, conceded 14. He was unbeaten, as was Jasprit Bumrah, who bowled four overs, conceding 45.

Chahal and Jadeja bowled four overs each, picking up a wicket apiece. While the former conceded 36, the latter conceded 23. Thakur, who bowled three overs, conceded 21. He picked up a couple of scalps, as did Shami, who bowled four overs, conceding 32.

The match was decided by a Super Over.

While Bumrah bowled it for India, Williamson and Guptill faced it for New Zealand, and scored a run apiece off the first two balls.

Williamson scored a six off the third and a boundary off the fourth.

Bumrah conceded a bye off the penultimate ball, and Guptill scored a boundary off the last ball.

New Zealand scored 17 without the loss of a wicket off their Super Over.

India were set a target of 18.

Sharma and Rahul walked out to face Southee.

Sharma scored a couple off the first ball, and a single off the second.

Rahul scored a boundary off the third ball, and a single off the fourth.

Sharma scored sixes off the last two balls.

India scored 20 without the loss of a wicket off their Super Over, winning the eliminator.

As a result of that, the visitors led the five-match series 3-0. In fact, they won the series with a couple of matches to spare.

Sunday, March 21, 2021

Rohit-led India do not (Ki)win

India made just one change to their playing eleven – Yuzvendra Chahal made way for Kuldeep Yadav.

New Zealand made just one change to the eleven that last played the Indians – Lockie Ferguson made way for Twenty20 International debutant Blair Tickner.

On winning the toss, Rohit Sharma, India’s skipper, inserted the hosts.

The first Powerplay of New Zealand’s innings – which was the mandatory Powerplay – was between the first and the sixth over. They scored 66, without the loss of a wicket.

New Zealand’s openers put on 50 off 5.2 overs (32 balls). India had conceded an extra at that point. While the contribution of Tim Seifert, the player of the series, to the partnership was 28, the Co(li)ntribution of Munro, the player of the match, to it was 24.

Seifert, whose 25-ball innings included three boundaries and as many sixes, eventually scored 43. Forty-six balls into the match, he was stumped by Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Yadav broke the 80-run partnership.

New Zealand scored 100 off 10.1 overs (61 balls). India had conceded an extra at that point.

The second-wicket pair put on 50 off 30 balls. While Munro’s contribution to the partnership was 35, the contribution of Kane Williamson, New Zealand’s skipper, to it was 15. Extras didn’t contribute to the partnership.

Munro, whose 40-ball innings included five boundaries and as many sixes, eventually scored 72. Thirty-four balls after Seifert’s dismissal, he was caught by Hardik Pandya. Yadav broke the 55-run partnership.

New Zealand scored 150 off 14.3 overs (87 balls). India had conceded five extras at that point.

Williamson, whose 21-ball innings included three boundaries, eventually scored 27. Eight balls after Munro’s dismissal, he was caught by Yadav. Khaleel Ahmed broke the 15-run stand.

De Grandhomme, whose 16-ball (Col)innings included three boundaries and a six, scored 30. Twenty-two balls later, he was caught by Dhoni. Bhuvneshwar Kumar broke the 43-run stand.

New Zealand scored 200 off 18.5 overs (113 balls). The number of extras they had conceded gave India no reason to be in seventh heaven. That was, incidentally, the number of extras they eventually conceded.

Daryl Mitchell, whose 11-ball innings included three boundaries, scored 19. He was unbeaten, as was Ross Taylor, who scored 14. His seven-ball innings included a boundary and a six.

India scored 212 for the loss of four wickets off 20 overs.

The five bowlers bowled four overs apiece.

The Pandya brothers were wicketless. While Krunal conceded 54, Hardik conceded 44.

Ahmed and Kumar picked up a wicket apiece. While the former conceded 47, the latter conceded 37.

Yadav, who conceded 26, picked up a couple of scalps.

The first Powerplay of India’s innings – which was the mandatory Powerplay – was between the first and the sixth over. They scored 57, for the loss of a wicket.

Shikhar Dhawan, whose four-ball innings included a boundary, scored five. Five balls into the chase, he was caught by Mitchell. Mitchell Santner broke the six-run stand.

India scored 50 off 5.2 overs (32 balls). New Zealand had conceded half-a-dozen extras at that point.

The second-wicket pair put on 50 off 29 balls. While Sharma’s contribution to the partnership was 20, Vijay Shankar’s contribution to it was 24. Extra’s contribution to the partnership was half-a-dozen.

Shankar, whose 28-ball innings included five boundaries and a couple of sixes, eventually scored 43. Forty-six balls after Dhawan’s dismissal, he was caught by de Grandhomme. Santner broke the 75-run partnership.

India scored 100 off 9.2 overs (56 balls). New Zealand had conceded eight extras at that point.

Rishabh Pant, whose 12-ball innings included a boundary and three sixes, scored 28. Twenty-four balls after Shankar’s dismissal, he was caught by Williamson. Tickner broke the 40-run stand.

Sharma, whose 32-ball innings included three boundaries, eventually scored 38. Ten balls later, he was caught by Seifert. Mitchell broke the 20-run stand.

Hardik, whose 11-ball innings included a boundary and a couple of sixes, scored 21. Five balls later, he was caught by Williamson. Scott Kuggeleijn broke the four-run stand.

The sixth-wicket pair D(hon)idn’t get off the mark. The man from Ranchi faced four balls, scoring a couple. Three balls later, he was caught by Southee off the bowling of Mitchell.

India scored 150 off 15.4 overs (94 balls). New Zealand had conceded eight extras at that point.

The seventh-wicket pair put on 50 off 22 balls. While Dinesh Karthik’s contribution to the partnership was 24, Krunal’s contribution to it was 25. Extra’s contribution to the partnership was three.

India scored 200 off 19.4 overs (118 balls). New Zealand had conceded 11 extras at that point.

Karthik, whose 16-ball innings included four sixes, eventually scored 33. He was unbeaten, as was Krunal, who eventually scored 26. His 13-ball innings included a couple of boundaries and as many sixes.

New Zealand eventually conceded a dozen extras. India, who scored 208 for the loss of half-a-dozen wickets off 20 overs, lost by four runs.

Ish Sodhi, who bowled a couple of overs, conceded 30. He was wicketless, as was Southee, who bowled four overs, conceding 47.

Kuggeleijn and Tickner bowled four overs each, picking up a wicket apiece. While the former conceded 37, the latter conceded 34.

Santner and Mitchell bowled three overs each, picking up a couple of scalps apiece. While the former conceded 32, the latter conceded 27.

New Zealand won the three-match series 2-1.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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