Monday, 30 March 2015

Cricket World Cup final match review: Australia v. New Zealand at Melbourne



The television promos for this match promised a ‘trans-Tasman showdown’ – an exceedingly rare thing in a sport in which the two countries didn’t play each other between 1946 and 1970 and in which the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy never quite attained the aura of the Bledisloe Cup – but the match didn’t really live up to its billing.

The wrestling to the ground of a streaker by Victoria’s finest just as the Kiwi anthem-singer was belting out the first phonemes of “E ihoa atua…” turned out, in retrospect, to be one of the more interesting events of the day. Fifty-over cricket has been polluted by whack-everything-for-six types like AB de Villiers, but it isn’t much more exciting when the wickets are tumbling.

There was a bit of that early on; indeed, Mitchell Starc rocketed one into Brendon McCullum’s off-stump in the first over to send the quintessential modern batsman back across the ditch for a duck. The Black Caps probably wished they hadn’t sent themselves in to bat when Martin Guptill fell for fifteen runs (bowled Maxwell) and Kane Williamson for twelve (caught and bowled Johnson), leaving the co-hosts 3 for 39 in the thirteenth over.

It was almost 4 for 66 in the twentieth when umpire Kumar Dharmasena gave Grant Elliott out leg before wicket off Glen Maxwell’s bowling, but the Kiwis wisely interpreted the Sri Lankan’s hesitation in putting his finger up as a good reason to use one of their challenges, and the third umpire reversed the decision. After being given a lifeline on fifteen runs, Elliott would go on to anchor the New Zealand innings. He and Ross Taylor put on a three-figure fourth-wicket partnership, slowly getting the run rate up and surviving until the thirty-sixth over.

The South African Marais Erasmus did his thing with the video replay and the Snicko, and found Taylor caught behind off James Faulkner’s bowling for forty. At 4 for 150, it looked like the men in black and electric blue might post a decent total after all, but the Tasmanian bowled Corey Anderson for a silver duck in the same over, and in the next, Michael Clarke caught Luke Ronchi at first slip off the bowling of Starc, sending the ex-Western Australian (who was, however, born in New Zealand – namely in the same town as was Joh Bjelke-Petersen) back to the pavilion for a fourth-ball duck.

Elliott survived another scare on seventy-three, Erasmus throwing a disputed leg before wicket decision back to Dharmasena, and the Australians’ performance in this newfangled thing called a ‘batting powerplay’ (taking three scalps and restricting the Kiwis to fifteen runs) augured a walkover. The forty-first over saw Mitchell Johnson bowl Daniel Vettori, whose batting prowess at the death of an innings had been on display in the semi-final against the Proteas in Auckland, and when Elliott finally fell in the next over (after scoring eighty-three runs before misjudging a lovely delivery from Faulkner and edging it to Brad Haddin), it was all over for the Black Caps.

The Kiwis’ total of 183, the historically-minded noted between the innings, was the same as that posted by Kapil Dev’s Indian team at Lord’s in the 1983 final, when the West Indies underestimated their opponents and managed to end up all out for 140. But Clarke’s men would be making no such mistake. There were hiccups along the way: Trent Boult got the wicket of Big Bash League star Aaron Finch, caught and bowled for a fifth-ball duck, in the fifth over, and David Warner survived a tenth-over appeal.

Nothing came of these early scares, and Warner and Steve Smith casually chipped away at the target, taking ones and twos wherever they could find them. When Warner was dismissed for forty-five in the thirteenth over (caught Elliott bowled Henry), it left Australia 2 for 63. The captain would come to the crease in his final one-day international at the last moment the Black Caps looked to have any sort of a chance.

From there, the match settled into the regular pattern of fifty-over matches these days – the bowlers not really trying to take wickets and the batsman not really able to get the ball past the full-court press along the boundary ropes. Clarke’s was the next wicket to fall – in the thirty-second over, bowled by Matt Henry for 74. At 3 for 175, Shane Watson and the still-at-the-crease Smith had little left to do, and the crowd of ninety-three thousand saw i gialloverdi stroll to a seven-wicket win with sixteen overs and five balls to spare.

Faulkner’s performance as what our friends across the Pacific would call a ‘closer’ earned him the man of the match award; while Starc was named player of the tournament. Yes, dear readers, after a tournament in which one-day cricket finally jumped the shark due to the number of ridiculously high totals and swashbuckling displays of six-hitting, they gave the player of the tournament award to a bowler. Even after the re-election of the premier who negotiated with the Lindt Café gunman and the Abbott government’s threat to remote indigenous communities, perhaps there is still some justice left in the world.

RIP Phil Hughes and contro il cricket moderno!

New Zealand 183 (45 overs) (Grant Elliott 83; Mitchell Johnson 3/30) – Australia 3/186 (33.1 overs) (Michael Clarke 74; Matt Henry 2/46)

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