Report

Lewis, Prendergast fifties in vain as Melie magic helps NZ win a thriller

Arun Kumar · · 4 min read

Lewis, Prendergast fifties in vain as Melie magic helps NZ win a thriller

New Zealand had another poor day in the field and were nearly embarrassed by Ireland on a glorious sunny day in Southampton before the defending champions held their nerve and kept their semi-final chances alive with their first win of the tournament.

It was far from a convincing day for New Zealand, who were reduced to 10 for 3 and 110 for 5 before the middle-order lifted them to 140. Ireland also kept New Zealand sweating for much of the 20 overs in the chase until the magic arm of Melie Kerr broke the century stand between Orla Prendergast and Gaby Lewis to bring the equation to 25 needed from 12.

The Turning Point

Ireland needed 18 from eight balls once Lewis fell in the penultimate over, and the two new batters found it much tougher to nail the big shots. Louise Little and Leah Paul brought it down to 15 off the last over that was given to Suzie Bates, who was playing her first game of this World Cup, having replaced Sophie Devine, who fell sick just before the game.

The lack of pace from Bates meant Paul and Little couldn’t find a boundary, and they fell short by four runs when they needed six off the last ball.

New Zealand’s Road Ahead

Now fourth in Group 2, New Zealand will know better than anyone that they will need far better performances to make the knockouts, as their last league game will be against England after they meet Scotland next.

Prendergast’s Heroics

At the helm for Ireland was Prendergast, who first dented New Zealand with her new-ball burst before her 45-ball half-century took Ireland agonisingly close, only three days after they gave England a scare too.

New Zealand’s hero also turned out to be their allrounder Melie, who first pulled them out of a hole and picked two crucial wickets in the end.

The Blast from Prendergast

New Zealand were in deep trouble early and lots had to do with Prendergast, who kept going for the top of middle stump and was rewarded twice. Isabella Gaze fell first when she missed a scoop on the first ball of the second over for just 1.

Maddy Green had eaten up five dots and when she charged against Prendergast at the start of the third over, New Zealand had slipped to 10 for 3. Prendergast was, however, taken off after two overs that fetched her figures of 2 for 6 with eight dot balls.

Halliday, Sharp, Bates Lift New Zealand

Melie rescued them along with Brooke Halliday as the captain stepped out against the spinners regularly to rotate the strike and find boundaries while also scooping and cutting Arlene Kelly for back-to-back boundaries in the last over of the powerplay to lift the scoring rate.

Halliday was largely kept quiet at the start as Ireland bowled smartly to their fields. But Melie perished too, holing out to deep midwicket for 30 off 24 as the Ireland spinners took the pace off considerably to make hitting a lot tougher.

While Halliday largely anchored, Isabella Sharp started to find the gaps more frequently as at last one boundary was hit from overs 10 to 13 to lift the run rate from under six to 6.61.

But Ireland fought back and dried up the boundaries for the next 35 balls while also removing the set batters. Halliday had just received some medical treatment and swept one straight to short fine leg for 34 in the 17th over before Sharp holed out to long-off for 36 off 28.

Bates, batting at No. 7 for the first time in T20Is in her 19-year career, finally broke the boundary drought with a reverse lap and also ended the innings with a desperate six pulled from way outside off after exposing her stumps.