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England [154/3 (18.3)] defeat New Zealand [153/5 (20.0)] by 7 wickets to win 1st T20I

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England lifted the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup for the first time this year. Now, they will begin their work towards becoming world champions in both limited-overs formats, starting with a five-match series against the same side they beat in the CWC19 final.

Overview

New Zealand v England, 1st T20I
Hagley Oval, Christchurch
Friday, 1 November; 2:00pm local, 1:00am GMT

Having won the 50-over World Cup after a thrilling finish in the final at Lord's on 14 July this year, England's focus now shifts to the ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2020, which is less than a year away. In their pursuit of a second successive limited-overs world title, England are committing themselves to trying out youngsters and have already announced two debutants, Pat Brown and Sam Curran, for the series opener, with four more uncapped players in the 15-member squad.

Their batting looks strong still, having piled up runs in the two practice games, and is further bolstered by Jonny Bairstow's return to form, as he scored an unbeaten 78 in his team's six-wicket win in the first practice game in Lincoln. It won't be as easy for the bowlers, though, especially with the small ground dimensions.

New Zealand, despite the absence of regular skipper Kane Williamson and premium fast bowler Trent Boult, and their lower positioning in the MRF Tyres ICC T20I Team Rankings, begin as favourites at home, with ample match-winners in their ranks. Colin Munro, who already has three T20I hundreds, seems to be in good touch, having scored an unbeaten 107 in the second practice game on Tuesday, 29 October.

While Martin Guptill and Ross Taylor bring a lot of experience in the batting department, the bowling, too, seems well-covered, with skipper Tim Southee leading the pack, alongside Lockie Ferguson. The X-factor, though, could be the spin duo of Ish Sodhi and Mitchell Santner, both of whom are among the top ten bowlers in the MRF Tyres ICC T20I Bowling Rankings.

Remember the last time

Their last international meeting was one to remember, and ended up being one of the greatest matches of all time, played on the greatest occasion, at the most iconic venue of them all. While it seems virtually impossible to beat that, the previous T20I played between the two teams, the last league game of the trans-Tasman tri-series in February 2018, was no less than a thriller.

Morgan led from the front with an unbeaten 80, while Dawid Malan scored 53 to power England to 194/7 after being put in to bat. Openers Guptill and Munro gave a strong start to the chase, scoring fifties. With 31 needed off 22 balls, with six wickets in hand, the home team seemed well-positioned for a comfortable win. But Tom Curran and Chris Jordan showcased their brilliance at the death to seal a two-run win in a nail-biting last-ball finish.

What they said

Tim Southee, New Zealand captain: "There's a few guys that were involved in the World Cup, there's only a couple in the England side. It's a different format, we've had a tour to Sri Lanka [since the World Cup]. Life goes on, you move on. We had the series in Sri Lanka and our focus is now on this. What happened in England has happened, it's time to box on and crack on to another series, and look forward to another World Cup in 12 months' time."

Eoin Morgan, England captain: “We have a special group of players at the moment. I feel very lucky to lead, and I think we can do something even more special down the line. I think we’re in a reasonably strong position. We’ll look to build our best XI and 15 for every series leading in, to fine-tune roles and have absolute clarity in what we’re trying to do as a team.”

Conditions

Hagley Oval has always been a high-scoring venue, with its batting-friendly pitch and short boundaries promising a lot of entertainment in white-ball cricket. Weather, however, might well play spoilsport, with even chances of rain in the afternoon. This will be the first-ever T20I to be played at this venue.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1475888
 
A couple of hours away.

Should be a good series this.
 
New Zealand: 1 Martin Guptill, 2 Colin Munro, 3 Tim Seifert, 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Colin de Grandhomme, 6 Daryl Mitchell, 7 Mitch Santner, 8 Scott Kuggeleijn, 9 Tim Southee, 10 Ish Sodhi, 11 Lockie Ferguson

England: 1 Jonny Bairstow, 2 Dawid Malan, 3 James Vince, 4 Eoin Morgan, 5 Sam Billings, 6 Lewis Gregory, 7 Sam Curran, 8 Tom Curran, 9 Chris Jordan, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Pat Brown
 
Feels like Guptill has been out of form for 2 years =\
 
Don't like watching this Pat Brown bowl. Seems to be laboring to the crease in his run up, not smooth. I just tend to not like bowlers who bowl so many slower bowls and variation, the typical t20 medium pacer.
 
England bowling well, batsmen not able to score freely.
 
Taylor should not be in the T20 team, he's too slow and isn't compact enough to be in the squad.
 
Man we bat like Pakistan these days :facepalm:

These bowlers aren't anything special either.
 
Very good catch. At least Guptill is continuing to be a specialist fielder.
 
England will win easily now, unless England have a massive Pakistani style collapse.
 
Man we bat like Pakistan these days :facepalm:

These bowlers aren't anything special either.

Well it’s more like that newzeland don’t have a second xi strong enough for even t20s they gotta play their best xi available to beat and compete with these these big oppositions.
 
England won by 7 wkts

NZ 153/5 (20.0), ENG 154/3 (18.3)

PLAYER OF THE MATCH : James Vince


James Vince's maiden T20I half-century, a flawless 38-ball 59, powered England to a comfortable seven-wicket win over New Zealand in the first T20I of the five-match series in Christchurch on Friday, 1 November.

Jonny Bairstow plundered 18 runs off the third over, bowled by Scott Kuggelejin, in England's chase of 154, but the hosts bowled as many as 21 dots in the first five, to keep themselves in the hunt. Mitchell Santner then struck in his opening over, removing Dawid Malan for 11, which brought out Vince. He played a cracking cut shot off the backfoot off the first ball he faced, to set the tone for a game-defining innings.

On a pitch that offered significant assistance from the spinners, the right-hander displayed excellent footwork against Ish Sodhi's wrist-spin, striking fours both off the front-foot and from well within the crease. Martin Guptill, meanwhile, grabbed one of the many stunners he regularly does on the field, holding on to a well-timed slog sweep from Bairstow to limit him to 35. Vince, though, carried on and registered his maiden T20I fifty with a deft stroke towards third man.

Santner (3/23), easliy the best bowler on show, revived hopes, removing Vince for 59, and conceded just two off the 16th over. But Morgan, alongside Sam Billings, finished the job with a four and a six off his opposite number Tim Southee, with nine balls to spare.

Earlier, a disciplined start with the ball from Engand's bowlers meant that the hosts could score only 17 from the first four overs, after being put in to bat. Sam Currran, one of England's three debutants, gave the visitors an early breakthrough, removing the dangerous Guptill for 2 in the third over. Colin Munro and Tim Seifert struck three sixes between them in the fifth, but the former's dismissal on the last ball of the Powerplay, put them back on resurrection mode.

Colin de Grandhomme walked in at No.4, and looked good during his 14-ball stay, striking a four and a six, before dragging one straight to cow corner off Adil Rashid on 19, while Seifert's innings was cut short by Chris Jordan on 32. The experienced Ross Taylor then held the innings together in the latter stages, and found great support in Daryl Mitchell, who breezed to a 17-ball 30*. New Zealand scored 48 off the last five to finish at 153/5, with Taylor (44) being the top-scorer.

The second T20I will be played at Wellington's Westpac stadium on Sunday, 3 November.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1476547
 
Daryl Mitchell, the New Zealand all-rounder, is confident of his team making a strong comeback, after going down to England by seven wickets in the first T20I of the five-match series, in Christchurch on Friday, 1 November.

New Zealand were outplayed in both departments, as the visitors completed their run-chase of 154 in the penultimate over of the innings. Mitchell, however, didn't read too much into the result and felt that the home team aren't too far off from a win.

"I guess you learn in professional sport that you keep backing your skills," Mitchell said. "It's only one game of cricket. I don't think we were too far off, really, at the end of the day."

The visitors showed great discipline with the ball, after Eoin Morgan elected to field on a slow surface, and Mitchell commended them for those efforts.

"It was tough to start on. It was a bit two-paced and a bit slow," Mitchell said of the Hagley pitch. "We lost a few wickets straight after the Powerplay there, which just halted our momentum a little bit for a while and we had to play catch-up. Once you get set, then it becomes a bit easier, but fair play to England, they adapted better than us.''

Colin Munro, Tim Seifert and Colin de Grandhomme got starts, but none of them could carry on for long, affecting New Zealand's progress in the middle overs. Mitchell called on the batsmen to take on more responsibility when the two sides meet next, in the second T20I in Wellington on Sunday, 3 November.

"Sunday at the Cake Tin [Westpac Stadium] is going to be exciting. Hopefully, two players can come off [with the bat] and get us the win. That's all it really takes."

Mitchell had walked in to bat in at the fall of Tim Serifert's wicket in the 14th over of the innings, and scored an unbeaten 30 off just 17 balls to take his side to 153/5 at the end of 20 overs. However, his performance was overshadowed by that of James Vince, England's No.3, who scored a fluent 59 to set up a comfortable win. The 28-year-old hoped the confidence from the win would carry through for the rest of the series.

"I think it will build a lot of confidence and belief in the group, with a lot of the main players missing," Vince said. "I think it will do wonders and, hopefully, we can continue the momentum on Sunday."

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1476558
 
It is a mark of excellent culture and bench strength that 33 yr old Morgan has built in the LOI squads that today he himself is openly discussing whether he should retire now and if he can maintain performance upto 2020 WT20.

Meanwhile gents like Azhar Ali and Hafeez are seeing dreams of extending legacy by 4-5 yrs
 
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