Phillips punishes the costliest drop of the World Cup as New Zealand survive Sri Lanka scare

By News / Wire

A brilliant Glenn Phillips century has helped New Zealand put one foot in the Twenty20 World Cup semi-finals with a 65-run win over Sri Lanka at the SCG.

After being dropped on 12 with New Zealand struggling at 3-28, Phillips made Sri Lanka pay as his 104 from 64 balls resurrected the Black Caps’ innings to 7-167.

Paceman Trent Boult (4-13) struck three times early as Sri Lanka slumped to 4-8 early in reply, before they were eventually all out for 102 in the 20th over.

The result means New Zealand can almost certainly qualify for the finals with a win over England or Ireland in their last two games, with net run-rate firmly in their favour.

Australia, England, Ireland and Sri Lanka and Afghanistan will then fight over the last qualifying spot out of the group, needing to win their last two games to have any chance.

England remain the best placed with a superior net run-rate out of those five teams, but their clash with New Zealand in Brisbane on Tuesday night is looking tougher by the day.

The Black Caps’ pace attack is shaping as among the best in the competition, with Boult and Tim Southee (1-12) regularly troubling rivals up top.

And while their top order fell apart early on Saturday night, Phillips’ knock showed the New Zealanders also have plenty of depth with the bat.

Glenn Phillips of New Zealand celebrates his century. (Photo by Matt King-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

After the SCG had looked like a batters’ paradise in its opening three games, he was the only man who really looked in on the newly-prepared wicket.

The right-hander initially helped steady the ship in an 84-run fourth-wicket stand with Daryl Mitchell (22), before powering home in the late overs.

Three of his four sixes came down the ground as his last 63 runs came off 28 balls.

Sri Lanka only had themselves to blame for the result.

Pathum Nissanka’s chance to remove Phillips at long off on 12 was a sitter, while Dasun Shanaka also put down a tough chance in the same position with Phillips on 45.

Should England lose to New Zealand on Tuesday night, Australia have winnable games against Ireland and Afghanistan and would be the next favourites to progress.

The Crowd Says:

2022-10-30T09:59:14+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


And that winner will be a best on the day winner not because of an obvious trend.

2022-10-30T08:21:04+00:00

Clear as mud

Guest


yes it's,like last time when apparejtly we didn't win well enough to deserve to be champs. sheesh. it's a round robin tournament with 8 real chances in a loopy format. whoever wins deserves to win.

2022-10-30T07:52:14+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


If you look at who England has lost to and then who Australia has lost to, I can't see why England deserves a final but Australia doesn't. Granted, Australia's selection has them in a bit of a "doesn't deserve to" frame, but no more than others. I'd say Australia is now almost certain to qualify if England loses to NZ.

2022-10-30T04:02:38+00:00

Republican

Guest


To be sure. India could match it with NZ while I reckon England can as well despite their rain assisted defeat at the hands of a spirited Irish side. Will their % be enough for them to contest at the pointy end? Australia won't get that opportunity & frankly don't deserve to.

2022-10-30T04:01:01+00:00

Basil Baborgnay

Roar Rookie


yeah nah. Sri Lanka are a mediocre side who lost to Namibia in qualifiers. Yet but for butterfingers they'd have skittled NZ and won easily. I like you had thought NZ were shoo-ins to win everything but I've since changed my mind. NZ are basically bullies who look good against feeble opponents (Aus + Lanka) but will crumble against the really top sides. In fact I am now predicting the Saffers to do a demolition job on the Kiwi pretenders and win their first world cricket world cup.

2022-10-30T00:47:20+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


They were in a mess early. This WC has about 6 sides at the same level.

2022-10-29T22:35:56+00:00

Republican

Guest


The T20 contest really is a fait accompli. I thought England and India might be contenders but really, NZ are in a league of their own

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