A streaker has a chat to Tom Latham and Mitchell Santner during the disastrous Black Caps run-chase. Photo / Photosport
COMMENT:
The New Zealand cricket team's World Cup campaign may have been saved by a mid-innings bowling spell against England, which hauled them back from the brink of a run-blasting abyss.
The day dawned fine but grim for the Black Caps. Lockie Ferguson was ruled out with what was describedas a "tight groin" in one quarter; the official diagnosis was "tight left hamstring". Then they lost the toss after being teased by a batting-friendly pitch. That left them exposed to aggression from the England top order who roared to 194 for one after 30 overs.
Jason Roy maintained a run-a-ball cadence until he popped a catch to cover off Jimmy Neesham for 60 off 61 balls.
Jonny Bairstow and Joe Root kept that momentum ticking with a 71-run, 69-ball second-wicket stand.
While Boult claimed Root, the 12-over combination lock between himself, Matt Henry, Tim Southee, Jimmy Neesham and Mitchell Santner brought resolve to what could have been a batting circus.
Henry got Bairstow for 106 off 99 balls with a full delivery that straightened to find a path into his castle; Boult had Jos Buttler miscuing to mid-off; Santner tempted Ben Stokes to hole out at long-on.
There's no shirking evidence that the bowling struggled in the early stanzas under the Roy and Bairstow spell. A case in point was Southee, making his first appearance at the tournament in Ferguson's absence. He couldn't replicate his seven-for-33 swinging miracle from 2015.
In a broader context, the hunt for 306 meant New Zealand have a net run-rate which should - barring a grotesque mismatch between Pakistan and Bangladesh on Friday at Lord's - guarantee a semifinal place as fourth qualifier in Manchester.
First, Pakistan need to win the toss and bat – they can't advance if Bangladesh take that option.
They must then score 350 and dismiss Bangladesh for 38 or fewer runs, while 400 would require their opponents out for fewer than 84.
Those margins would make it the biggest win in ODI history – which is currently New Zealand's 290-run win over Ireland in 2008.
The efforts over that 12-over period against England should ensure there are no Lord's miracles.