New Zealand rout England by eight wickets
" New Zealand 125 for 2 (McCullum 77) beat England 123 (Root 46, Southee 7-33)
by eight wickets "
WELLINGTON:
Paceman Tim Southee recorded the best one-day figures by a New Zealander while
Brendon McCullum hit the fastest World Cup half-century to lead their team’s
one-sided eight-wicket win over a hapless England on Friday.
Southee took
seven for 33 in his nine overs as England collapsed to 123 all out in just 33.2
overs.
New Zealand captain McCullum’s
rollicking 25-ball 77 with seven sixes and eight fours at the top of the order
then saw the tournament co-hosts romp to victory in just 12.2 overs of their
reply in Wellington.
When the
umpires called for a dinner break with New
Zealand needing just 12 more runs
to win, jeers rang out around the packed 33,000 capacity Westpac Stadium.
But although
the amount of cricket played was under half the scheduled 100 overs of a
one-day international, the crowd certainly got their money’s worth.
Victory gave New Zealand, one of the tournament
favourites, their third win in as many Pool Agames while
England were left with two defeats in two following a 111-run thrashing by
Australia.
Sensing an
easy win, McCullum launched a ferocious attack on the England bowling, hitting
Stuart Broad for a six off the first ball he faced.
Fast bowler
Steven Finn was not spared as McCullum hit six, four, four and six off the
Middlesex paceman’s first four balls and then another six to bring up his fifty
off just 18 balls.
McCullum held
the previous record for the fastest World Cup fifty, off 20 balls against
Canada at St Lucia in 2007.
Finn’s two
wicketless overs cost a whopping 49 runs
Chis Woakes
ended McCullum’s knock by bowling him off a bottom edge.
South
Africa’s AB de Villiers holds the record for the fastest-ever one-day
international fifty, off just 16 balls, made against the West Indies last
month.
Earlier it
was Southee who left England clueless after Eoin Morgan won the toss and batted
on a flat looking pitch.
Southee
achieved the third-best figures in all World Cups and beat the previous best by
a New Zealander in all ODIs, recorded by Shane Bond, now the team’s bowling
coach, who took six for 19 against India at Bulawayo in 2005.
Only Joe
Root, last man out in the 34th over, offered resistance with 46 while opener
Moeen Ali made 20 and Morgan managed 17 in an otherwise disappointing batting
display.
“It’s a bit of
a blur at the moment,” said Southee during the change of innings. “We’re good
swing bowlers and, although we lost the toss, the ball swung throughout the
innings.
“They say
that when there’s a bit of blue sky in Wellington, the ball
swings.”
England were
looking at a revival at 103 for three with Morgan and Root at the crease.
But former
Ireland left-hander Morgan, who had managed just two runs with four ducks in
his previous five innings, holed out at long-on off Vettori.
He was left
to rue his shot as England lost their last seven wickets for just 19 runs.
Openers Ian
Bell (eight) and Moeen Ali (20) were both bowled by Southee, who subsequently
dismissed James Taylor (nought), Jos Buttler (three), Chris Woakes (one),
Stuart Broad (four) and Steven Finn (nought).
He took his
final five wickets in the space of just 18 balls to record the third best
figures in all World Cups behind the Australian duo of Glenn McGrath (7-15) and
Andy Bichel (7-20). (AFP)
A
shell-shocked England emerged into the field with nothing left to give. James
Anderson's first ball was a wide and things did not improve. McCullum upper cut
his first delivery from Broad over third man - New Zealand did not need to make
further statements, but the captain was not of that frame of mind.
The fifty was brought up with the first of the four sixes in a row
off Finn, which also struck a sponsor's car, and McCullum kept launching him
with fearsome power over the off side. Staggeringly, thoughts briefly turned to
whether he could manufacture enough of the strike to challenge the fastest
hundred - AB de Villiers' 31-ball against West Indies - but that would have
been one record too many on an extraordinary day.
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