New Zealand 251 (Broom 109, Mashrafe 3-49) beat Bangladesh 184 (Kayes 59, Williamson 3-12) by 67 runs
Another mind-desensitizing batting breakdown from Bangladesh implied that they lost the Nelson ODI and alongside it the arrangement to New Zealand.
They just had 252 to chase, and at one point were 105 for 1 yet wound up losing the staying nine wickets for just 79 runs. This implied Neil Broom, who made his first ODI century about eight years after his introduction, had something exceptional to enjoy.
There was a blushing period, as with most Bangladesh batting breakdown. After New Zealand were confined to the primary score under 300 batting first at home against Bangladesh, Kayes and Sabbir Rahman included 75 keeps running for the second wicket.
Kayes demonstrated great persistence, poking singles off the wicket-to-wicket balls and taking full toll when he was given width. The haul likewise turned out various circumstances and when low maintenance seamer Colin Munro dropped him on 19, New Zealand would have been stressed. Sabbir, from the flip side, unquestionably cut and drove the quick bowlers as Bangladesh appeared to take control. They required 146 keeps running off 163 balls with nine wickets close by.
That was the point at which the main domino fell, by means of a tragicomic run-out. Kayes pushed the ball into the spreads and set off for a brisk single. Sabbir reacted at first before altering his opinion. Kayes continued running, and wound up coming to the non-striker’s end before Sabbir who had dismissed him. That implied the toss at the strikers’ end basically prompted to the non-striker’s run out.
At that point, in the 26th more than, an inswinging yorker from Lockie Ferguson toppled Mahmudullah’s center stump.
Three overs later, Shakib Al Hasan slice Kane Williamson to in reverse point. In the following over from the low maintenance offspinner, Mosaddek Hossain chipped a catch to mid-off.
Five balls later Kayes drove sluggishly at a Tim Southee conveyance and Bangladesh’s best seek after stemming the crumple was gone. He made 59 off 89 with six fours.
Bangladesh lost six wickets in 10 overs between the 23rd and the 33rd and were in the end knocked down some pins out for 184. One additionally condemning indication of their fall was that it was a section clock, Williamson, who took the most wickets – 3 for 22.
Source: crictale
