England hammer the disappointing Black Caps to secure a World Cup semi-final spot

By Neel / Roar Guru

Both England and New Zealand had contrasting runs heading into their last group stage fixture.

New Zealand won five, had one washout, and lost their last two fixtures. They lost to Pakistan at Edgbaston by six wickets and were thrashed by the Aussies in their last fixture at Lord’s by 85 runs after Mitchell Starc destroyed their batting line-up.

England won their last game against India by 31 runs, a result which came on the back of four wins and three losses.

It was a must-win match for both sides but more so for England. If the hosts lost, there was a possibility they would bundle out of their home tournament in the group stages despite starting as overwhelming favourites.

Eoin Morgan won the toss and elected to bat first. The groundsmen stated it was a better pitch to bat on than the one Sri Lanka and the West Indies played on earlier in the week.

The Englishmen needed a good start from the openers, and they delivered a 123-run stand off 112 balls. Jason Roy scored his second consecutive half-century and his third for the tournament, while Jonny Bairstow scored his second consecutive ton. Jimmy Neesham broke the partnership when Roy lobbed the ball to Mitchell Santner in the 19th over, departing for 60 off 61 deliveries with the score at 123.

The only other 50+ partnership of the was between Bairstow and Joe Root. They added 71 runs off 69 deliveries, and when Root faintly edged the ball to Tom Latham, the score was 194.

Following Root’s departure, England kept losing wickets at regular intervals and were restricted well by New Zealand in the last 20 overs, when they only managed 111 runs.

Matt Henry bowled Bairstow for a wonderful 99-ball 106, with 15 fours and one six, and Eoin Morgan chipped in with 42 off 40. Neesham, Trent Boult and Henry all had economy rates under six an over and picked up two wickets apiece as England ended up with 305/8 off 50 overs.

New Zealand needed a good start, but lost both their openers early – not for the first time this World Cup. Henry Nicholls was given out for a golden duck, lbw off the bowling of Chris Woakes. Replays showed that if he had reviewed the decision, he would have been not out. Martin Guptill’s horrible World Cup campaign continued when Jos Buttler took a spectacular catch down the leg side to remove him for eight.

Two game-changing moments came through a couple of contrasting run-outs. Kane Williamson departed for 27 off 40 via a deflection off Mark Wood’s fingertips during his follow-through. Not long after, Ross Taylor was caught short trying to take on Adil Rashid in the deep, gone for 28 off 42.

Jimmy Neesham and Tom Latham stitched a solid 50-run partnership at just better than a run a ball before Neesham chopped on off Wood for 19. When Colin De Grandhomme tried to pull Ben Stokes for six and got in the deep by Joe Root, New Zealand’s innings was in total disarray and slowed down from there.

Latham went for 57 off 65 balls, his knock the only positive in the innings.

When Boult was stumped off Rashid’s bowling, it ended a 119-hammering five overs early.

England were excellent, winning their second straight must-win encounter. They’re looking dangerous at the right time.

New Zealand, though, have plenty to ponder upon before their next fixture. They have most likely qualified for the semi-finals provided Pakistan don’t pull off a miraculous thrashing off Bangladesh. The struggling Black Caps will face the team that comes first at Old Trafford on Tuesday, and they have six days to turn their fortunes around.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2019-07-07T14:10:43+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Those two weeks after Sri Lanka beat England were a bit intriguing but to be honest the World Cup, in terms of match outcomes haven’t really been close other than 6-7 games. I hope it doesn’t either mate.

AUTHOR

2019-07-07T14:08:35+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Poor is an understatement mate. They liked really deflated.

AUTHOR

2019-07-07T14:08:17+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


That was a great prediction Brian.

AUTHOR

2019-07-07T14:05:46+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Thanks Paul. Yeah, there were a few moments that didn’t go New Zealand’s way, but then again, to lose by over 100 runs is quite disappointing. I couldn’t believe Henry Nicholls didn’t review his dismissal. That moment indicated the lack of confidence there was in the Blackcaps. Well, times change really quickly Paul. Australia have been really impressive at times throughout this World Cup. The semis will be interesting.

AUTHOR

2019-07-07T14:02:42+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Ben, the way our openers are going, we might as well open with Kane Williamson.

AUTHOR

2019-07-07T14:01:43+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Jeff, I think the bowling has been fine. Everyone has done their bit with the ball. Santner might be the one bowler that might come under scrutiny though. His wicket-taking ability has been a worry of late.

AUTHOR

2019-07-07T14:00:07+00:00

Neel

Roar Guru


Hey Ronan. Thanks for the comment and I really admire the way you write your articles. Yeah, the batting has been ordinary. Williamson is the only batsman from the New Zealand line up to average more than 40 with the bat in this World Cup. The rest have been nothing short of disappointing. It’s just so weird, because there were a few of New Zealand batsman who were in pretty good nick heading into the tournament. The semi-final against India will be tough, but as a Kiwi supporter, I’m always hopeful.

2019-07-04T15:45:04+00:00

BarmyFarmer

Guest


NZ were very poor without Ferguson and yes whilst they had the luck against them I would still wager England would have won comfortably as NZ have no depth at all to their batting. Its a 3 horse race now and all 3 can and have beaten each other in recent times so I think its wide open especially now the weather has picked up. It will be an advantage to set first and apply pressure but all 3 sides are capable of 300 plus chases so it will simply be down to who turns up on the day and holds their nerve.

2019-07-04T09:24:16+00:00

Sylvester

Guest


NZ have been poor but do have the talent and experience to turn up for a knock out.

2019-07-04T09:14:14+00:00

Ben

Guest


Williamson and Taylor shouldn't be responsible for digging them out of a 2/30 hole every time, their openers, especially Guptill need to stand up.

2019-07-04T07:45:42+00:00

Lawrence

Roar Rookie


2016 World 20/20 match, Agar went 18 off his 1 over. Weirdly took the captaincy off Finch and dropped him for the match.

2019-07-04T07:16:43+00:00

Republican

Guest


.......watch him and the whole side fire up v us.

2019-07-04T07:15:33+00:00

Republican

Guest


.......I reckon more than you care to realise. Every game v Australia is a 'big game of cricket' for NZ. We are their greatest adversaries.......

2019-07-04T07:10:13+00:00

Brian

Guest


Its not a free kick yet cause Australia have to beat South Africa. Given the Saffers are generally along with Australia the best players of pace I can definately see them beating Australia.

2019-07-04T06:36:47+00:00

dat

Roar Rookie


kohli didn't play a few and bumrah was rested for the entire series.

2019-07-04T06:14:57+00:00

Paul

Roar Guru


Sorry Perthsayer, I should have explained better. I was actually thinking about a comment from 3 months ago. At that time, Finch was out of form, no Warner, no Smith, Starc & Cummins hadn't bowled a ball in anger due to injury, nobody wanted Carey in the team, everyone was whinging because we had no hitters apart from Maxwell and we'd be blown off the park by all these teams making 350 against us. I figured then, we might scrape 6 wins and just make 4th place. Thankfully the guys mentioned have all come good - some in a really big way.

2019-07-04T05:13:37+00:00

VivGilchrist

Roar Rookie


When has NZ ever beaten Australia in a big game of cricket?

2019-07-04T05:11:53+00:00

El Loco

Roar Rookie


Careful, there's plenty of famously missed free kicks.

2019-07-04T05:06:46+00:00

Perthstayer

Roar Rookie


Why feel Australia would have struggled through? 3 players would get in anyone's team is a great backbone. When they perform just needs 3 others to step up and job done. If Starc twists his ankle McGrath style, then it'll be tough.

2019-07-04T04:13:26+00:00

Chris Kettlewell

Roar Guru


The moment the match is won, they don't bowl any more balls, even from a no ball. Technically hitting a six of a first ball no-ball would be the best they could do, but that would just be a win off zero balls which makes their overall NRR calculation improved by a single ball. But they wouldn't get the extra balls to hit more sixes because they've already won. As for calculating the NRR scenarios, I go to espncricinfo and the cricket world cup section, then select table. It shows the full table which includes not just the NRR, but the breakdown of for and against, which is runs/overs for, and runs/overs against. So effectively, calculating scenarios, you add runs and overs to the for and runs and overs to the against, and re-calculate. The calculation is (Runs for / overs) - (Runs against / overs). So it's easy enough to plug into a spreadsheet, and then play with different scenarios of scores to see what happens to the NRR. Just remember, in those calculations, that a team being bowled out still counts as 50 overs for their NRR, no matter how many overs they actually faced. But a chasing team reaching a total in less than 50 overs counts the exact number of overs faced.

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