Lol, Franklin, NcCullum, and Afridi.
I had to go to work (stupid work), so I caught very little of the match, but the umpires did bring on at least one replacement ball - and that was in the over before Latham and Ronchi were both dismissed. After that I doubt the ball would have spent enough time on the ground to get particularly wet.Does anyone know if Sri Lanka still had to bowl with two new balls in the second innings? It would've been hard enough for the spinners to try and bowl with a wet ball, but having to bowl with a wet ball that was (for the most part) less than 10 overs old would've been a nightmare.
his average is 17.6 which sounds about what I expected when he got selected. However I was genuinely impressed with his T20 effort and I don't mind if he sticks around in that format. He actually got on with the job and wasn't unnecessarily concerned about preserving his wicket (which is what I was expecting and how he bats in the HRV cup).Great result to wake up to
Devich out for a low score.
NZ win a thriller
A young NZ prospect comes good (Latham)
Yes I was planning on commenting on this by itself - the ODI side has been in a state of flux to a greater degree in the last 12-18 months than I can remember. If I find the time I might compile a list of ODI matches per player over this period - I'd say there are a large number of guys that have played around 20-40% of matches and a group of regulars playing around 70% of matches, with only a handful of injuries to partially explain this. It's not just the bowling attack either; the whole ODI (and T20) side appears to have unofficially adopted some sort of rotation policy, or someone has decided that we must experiment with as many random assortments of the 20 or so World Cup hopefuls in order to possibly find a magical best combination.Given the ridiculous chopping and changing of the bowling attack on this tour