Guptill all tangled up
ESPNcricinfo presents the Plays of the day of the third ODI between New Zealand and Zimbabwe, in Napier
When Martin Guptill deposited Elton Chigumbura into the straight stand Brendon Taylor sent mid-off back to the boundary and brought fine leg in. Without missing a beat, Guptill shaped to play the over-the-shoulder scoop next ball, but was surprised by a delivery shorter than he expected. He went through with the shot, turning it into a part-pull, part-shovel, part-evasive manoeuvre and collected four for his troubles.
Zimbabwe have been atrocious in the field for virtually the entire tour, and they began the third one-dayer in similar fashion. The New Zealand openers were threatening to attack early, when Brian Vitori banged one in and induced a top edge from Rob Nicol. Going backwards from square leg, Tino Mawoyo ran a tad too far, and in his attempts to lean back and take the catch with his fingers pointed upwards, he managed only to get a wrist to it and down it went.
Brendon McCullum was destroyer-in-chief during the final overs, but he too had a let-off, long before the boundaries began to flow from his blade. In an attempt to reach fifty with a six, McCullum mistimed a straight hit off Vitori and offered a simple running catch to Regis Chakabva at long-off. This too was predictably shelled and McCullum added 60 more runs at a strike rate of 189.
For the third time in the series, Martin Guptill bossed the Zimbabwe bowlers, before finding a way to get out with a hundred beckoning. Napier provided the most bizarre dismissal of the lot, when he was stumped down the leg side off a Ray Price wide. With the ball spinning past his thigh pad, Guptill glanced back and stepped out of his crease having decided Tatenda Taibu had not collected the ball. No sooner than he had done so, he saw Taibu did in fact have the ball, but the keeper was struggling to collect it properly himself. Knotting himself up in an attempt to get back, Guptill almost did the splits and hit the ground. Taibu eventually took off the bails, leaving Guptill frustrated and a tad embarrassed.
Andrew Fernando writes for The Pigeon and has a column here