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New Zealand [176/8] beat England [155/10] by 21 runs in the 2nd T20I to level T20I series 1-1

The Viper

T20I Debutant
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New Zealand seek improvement with the ball in second T20I

The strength of England’s bench was on driven home with all the subtlety of a sledgehammer in the first Twenty20 International against New Zealand in Christchurch. Ahead of the second game, on Sunday, 3 November in Wellington, the onus is on the home side to display their own prowess.

Overview

New Zealand v England, 2nd T20I
Westpac Stadium, Wellington
Sunday, 3 November; 2:00pm local, 1:00am GMT

Much like England, who have rested a host of their first-team players, New Zealand are missing their captain, Kane Williamson, and perhaps their most lethal pacer in Trent Boult, with both players rested to varying degrees. Unlike England, however, their bench has a lot more experience – the likes of Tim Seifert and Scott Kuggeleijn have been on the international scene for a while now.

Boult has been replaced by the express pace of Lockie Ferguson, remarkably playing just his sixth T20I in Christchurch, and the only real newbie in the side is Daryl Mitchell, who impressed with a 17-ball 30* in the opener.

New Zealand will be hoping for, nay expecting, a better performance come Sunday. Their bowlers, in particular, will have to step up, with all of Tim Southee, Ferguson, Kuggeleijn and Ish Sodhi going wicketless in the first game.

England will be unconcerned with all that. They will be encouraged by the fact that their youngsters – all of Pat Brown, Lewis Gregory and Sam Curran made debuts in the first T20I – were unfazed by the occasion, and the youth revolution will, hopefully for them, continue in Wellington.

To that end, the management might consider – if any changes are needed at all – including the fluent stroke-maker Tom Banton to the mix, even if his two outings in the warm-ups yielded 6 and 11.

Remember the last time

England eased to a seven-wicket win with nine balls to spare. They asked New Zealand to bat first, and their bowlers largely did a good job of ensuring none of the home batsmen blazed away. Apart from Ross Taylor (44 off 35) and Daryl Mitchell (30* off 17) late in the innings, everyone else was largely tied up and New Zealand managed to post 153/5.

England were relentless in pursuit of the target. Their openers put on 37, and then James Vince came in and bludgeoned a 38-ball 59 to steer the chase. Eoin Morgan contributed 34* assured runs off 21 balls, while Sam Billings’ 11-ball 14* meant the chase was completed in 18.3 overs.

What they said

Tim Southee, New Zealand captain: “We need to find a way to put pressure on the new batters coming out. We were a little bit off with the ball and in the field."

James Vince, England batsman: “With some of the main guys missing, it would be nice to get a bit of a run in the side, post some scores and make some match-winning contributions.”

Conditions

Rains are expected in Wellington next week, but they are forecast to begin a day after the match. Sunny skies are expected, although things can get a bit nippy as the evening approaches. New Zealand have won seven of their 10 T20Is at the Westpac Stadium, but one of their losses came against England in 2013.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1477650
 
Teams:

New Zealand: 1 Colin Munro, 2 Martin Guptill, 3 Tim Seifert (wicketkeeper), 4 Colin de Grandhomme, 5 Ross Taylor, 6 Daryl Mitchell, 7 Jimmy Neesham, 8 Mitch Santner, 9 Tim Southee (captain), 10 Ish Sodhi, 11 Lockie Ferguson

England: 1 Jonny Bairstow, 2 Dawid Malan, 3 James Vince, 4 Eoin Morgan (captain), 5 Sam Billings (wicketkeeper), 6 Lewis Gregory, 7 Sam Curran, 8 Chris Jordan, 9 Adil Rashid, 10 Saqib Mahmood, 11 Pat Brown
 
:out

97 . 4

Kiwis loosing wickets at regular interval here , they need one batsman to bat till the end here
 
NZ - 152/7 after 18.1 overs.

This should be too easy for England. Not enough runs on the board.
 
NZ recovered well thanks to Neesham blitz.

NZ - 176/8 after 20 overs.

Innings break.
 
England - 49/3 after 6 overs.

Run rate is still good for England. They just have to keep wickets in hand.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] you were saying newzeland are a mediocre t20 team loll
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] you were saying newzeland are a mediocre t20 team loll

To be fair, England experimented with the team a lot. Many regulars were missing (Stokes, Archer etc.). It was effectively a 2nd tier team.
 
New Zealand beat England by 21 runs to level the Twenty20 series at 1-1 in Wellington.

Chasing 177 for victory, England slipped to 3-2 after eight balls before being bowled out for 155 despite Chris Jordan's 19-ball 36 late on.

The returning Jimmy Neesham made 42 off 22 balls and Martin Guptill 41 in New Zealand's 176-8, with Chris Jordan taking 3-23 and Sam Curran 2-22.

The third game of the five-match series is in Nelson at 01:00 GMT on Tuesday.

England, who have rested several first-choice players, restricted the Black Caps to what felt like a below-par total, despite dropping five catches, after winning the toss.

Although the pitch had more pace than the one in the series opener in Christchurch and the square boundaries were short, it never felt like England were in control of the chase despite flurries from captain Eoin Morgan, Dawid Malan and Jordan.

New Zealand spinners Mitchell Santner and Ish Sodhi were impressive, taking a combined 5-62 from eight overs.

Mixed fortunes for England new boys
After handing debuts to three players in the seven-wicket win on Friday, England gave Lancashire pace bowler Saqib Mahmood his first cap in place of Tom Curran.

Mahmood, bowling in the powerplay and death overs, finished with 1-46 from four overs.

After conceding 15 from his first over, he fought back well in his second by having Tim Seifert caught behind attempting to ramp.

Mahmood's final two overs, the 17th and 19th of the innings, went for 11 and 15 respectively, although he regularly found the block hole.

Fellow seamer Pat Brown, who took 1-33 on debut in the series opener, conceding 32 from two overs.

After not bowling or batting in the first game, Lewis Gregory struck with his first ball in international cricket as he nipped one back to bowl the dangerous Colin de Grandhomme, who made 28 from only 12 balls.

While not new to international cricket, it was only Sam Curran's second T20 international appearance and he was again impressive in taking 2-22 from four overs.

England will be disappointed with the quality of their fielding, however. Three of the five dropped catches were fairly routine, with James Vince spilling two simple chances and an extremely tough one.

Guptill & Neesham fire with the bat

Martin Guptill, who made two from seven balls in the first T20, showed glimpses that he was finding rhythm again during his 28-ball innings.

Strong down the ground and through the on side, he gave New Zealand's innings impetus at the top of the order, something that was missing on Friday.

All-rounder Neesham had not featured in a T20 international since January 2017, but his impressive 50-over World Cup, where he scored 232 runs and took 15 wickets, earned him a recall.

Based on Saturday's display, New Zealand have to find a way to get him into their side regularly.

Particularly strong on the leg side, the left-hander also played one gorgeous inside-out shot over extra-cover off Mahmood that demonstrated his undeniable quality.

His contribution was integral to th

Source: https://www.bbc.com/sport/cricket/50279217.
 
[MENTION=131701]Mamoon[/MENTION] you were saying newzeland are a mediocre t20 team loll

England have picked a weak squad that would probably even lose to Pakistan. No Roy, Stokes, Buttler, Archer, Wokes, Plunkett etc.
 
England have picked a weak squad that would probably even lose to Pakistan. No Roy, Stokes, Buttler, Archer, Wokes, Plunkett etc.

Not sure why reference to Pakistan in a thread about NZ and England. Dont derail.
 
I've tried to watch these first two NZ vs ENG T20 games, but they are just too boring. Honeslty, the New Zeland cricket summer is just getting more boring year after year, espicially since New Zeland keeps on playing small teams (e.g Sri Lanka and Bangladesh last year) and thrash them and they seem to host the same teams they hosted literally in the last couple of years (they played both India and England in their last cricket summer and are hosting both of them for this cricket summer too!).
 
ngland captain Eoin Morgan remained upbeat after their loss to New Zealand in the second T20I.

England lost the game by 21 runs, in part because of a number of dropped chances in the field. "When you drop that amount of catches it's not a great reflection on the performance and the levels of fielding that we aspire to," Morgan said. "There were a couple of catches that went in the sun which made it look a lot worse but as regards our standard catches, we expect more.

"I think it's more of an attitude thing because there's such a short turnaround, the natural default of any player is to step back and not commit to a 50-50 chance or their mindset changes to go back in their shell. That's not what we want, we want guys continuing to attack the ball, find themselves in hot spots if they're good enough and if they drop catches, they drop catches. That's the nature of it."

The English skipper was also glad that the new players in the side were not having things all their own way, believing adversity is an important step in their journey towards regular international cricket.

"We have to make mistakes," Morgan said. "If guys come in and smash it from the start and really find international cricket easy, I don't think that's a great opportunity given to guys. We want to see guys being pegged back and how they react from there. Chances will continue to come and opportunities will continue to come regardless of the result."

Batsman Dawid Malan, who top-scored for England with 39, was disappointed with his side's fielding, but also believed that the management of Morgan and head coach Chris Silverwood would help the side come back from it.

"We fielded really well in the first game, so for us to come here and do what we did today was disappointing," Malan told Sky Sports. "The good thing about the way Morgs (Morgan) and Silvers (Silverwood) run the show is they don't put a lot of pressure on you - it's up to us to rectify that problem."

Morgan was, however, full of praise for bowling all-rounder Chris Jordan, who finished with figures of 3/23 from his four overs, before smashing 36 from 19 balls. "He was exceptional," Morgan said. "One of the reasons we combine these new guys with experienced players is to have them out on the field doing what they do. Having CJ out there with his experience and his execution is outstanding. He's one of the best."

Source: https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1482370.
 
I've tried to watch these first two NZ vs ENG T20 games, but they are just too boring. Honeslty, the New Zeland cricket summer is just getting more boring year after year, espicially since New Zeland keeps on playing small teams (e.g Sri Lanka and Bangladesh last year) and thrash them and they seem to host the same teams they hosted literally in the last couple of years (they played both India and England in their last cricket summer and are hosting both of them for this cricket summer too!).

The New Zealand tv coverage is quite boring and simple. The scorecard has been the same for the last 5 years and it's bad. Australia has the best coverage by far, followed by England. Even South Africa has good coverage.
 
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