Kiwis eye final ODI win in Karachi before shifting focus towards India

Kiwis eye final ODI win in Karachi before shifting focus towards India

Cricket

Kiwis eye final ODI win in Karachi before shifting focus towards India

KARACHI (Web Desk) – The fast-paced nature of Pakistan vs New Zealand series hasn’t allowed for much time for adjustment, but it seems New Zealand has quickly become accustomed to the conditions in Karachi.

In the first ODI, they were sent in to bat and scored a subpar total. However, when the pitch began to take turn in the cooler evening conditions, they realised they had left out Ish Sodhi from the starting lineup.

Just 36 hours later, Kane Williamson was back at the toss, and decided to bat first again after winning the coin flip. Recognising that the afternoon offered the best batting conditions, Williamson and Devon Conway put up a 181-run partnership, putting New Zealand so far ahead in the game that the collapse they suffered later on did not matter.

Due to the changes in the pitch conditions, New Zealand brought back Sodhi and only had their seamers bowl 13 overs. They were able to take advantage of the early seam and swing but once Mitchell Santner was brought in for the ninth over, the seamers only bowled five more overs for the whole innings. The pitch was now gripping, skidding, stopping, and turning, and no Pakistan batter aside from Babar Azam seemed comfortable. Pakistan was bowled out for 182, while New Zealand only lost one wicket when they reached 182.

This was New Zealand’s most impressive ODI win since the 2019 World Cup, not just since it came against a side that was gunning for the number one ranking, but also because of where it came in a World Cup year. New Zealand’s have a 17-6 win-loss record in this World Cup cycle, but many of those victories have come against much weaker sides on paper. Away wins have make that point even more starkly, their previous ODI successes out of New Zealand played out in Dublin, Edinburgh and Bridgetown. (Sydney and Cairns, on the other hand, saw them come up empty-handed.)

Karachi is a noteworthy addition to the list in a year where the World Cup will be held across the border, especially since New Zealand will take a chartered flight out to Hyderabad on Saturday to kick off a white-ball tour of India. They might find spin doesn’t offer quite as much joy there - spinners in India have proved to be more expensive this World Cup cycle than any other country bar Australia - but their well-rounded ability means options with the ball should not be in short supply.

These are fairly similar sides in a number of ways. Pakistan, like New Zealand have an impressive ODI record of late, caveated by lots of home matches and less than challenging opposition for the most part. They can call upon a range of express fast bowlers - though no one has proved faster than Lockie Ferguson over these two ODIs. In an impressive start to ODI cricket, Usama Mir has shown an ability both to contain and to strike, while Mohammad Nawaz is more than capable of cancelling Santner out.

New Zealand are likely to run into just as many problems chasing on these surfaces, with a top-heavy batting line-up and a middle order that is both one-dimensional and unconvincing. Until July 2022, Pakistan and New Zealand ranked top of the list for runs scored by the top three since July 2019; less than half of both sides’ ODI runs have been scored by the bottom eight (34% and 47% respectively). It was notable on Wednesday that, as the asking rate steadily climbed and wickets fell, Pakistan had no one lower down the order capable of relieving the pressure with a mood-shifting cameo. Even Agha Salman, the only top seven batter to broach a strike rate of 70, managed his 22-ball 25 with sweeps and canny placement rather than the sort of power-hitting Pakistan needed at that stage.

It makes leaving Khushdil Shah out of a squad that included a list of probables that seemed to burgeon daily during the first few days of Shahid Afridi’s selectorial career all the more puzzling. Since the start of last year, the only Pakistani middle-order batter with a better strike rate than his 102.46 is the injured Shadab Khan. Khushdil’s consistency while maintaining that high-risk approach is also notable; only once in those six innings has he been dismissed for fewer than 19, with his repertoire boasting two cameos that swung games around against Australia and West Indies.

But if conditions for the deciding ODI replicate those of their predecessors, the toss will invariably assume even greater importance, a point Mohammad Nawaz alluded to after Wednesday’s defeat.

"You’ll have seen the ball turns and bounces a lot more in the second innings," he said. "You can’t use the toss as an excuse, but the behaviour of the pitch changed considerably. The toss plays a role."

Pakistan will hope they can glean as much out of that defeat as New Zealand did theirs as a difficult international home season finally draws to a close.

New Zealand, meanwhile, might just be getting started. After one more tilt on a Karachi ground they seem to have become fairly familiar with, they will turn their attentions to India, a place their attentions may well remain all the way through to November.




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