But did it do more harm than good? No way; 100 off 115 bringing about a slightly sub-par total. >>> NZ 230 all-out.
You and I agree that the total is sub par. You say "slightly" I say "significantly". That was a 350-400 wicket. I have criticized Latham (who slowed after being 8 off 5 balls) and Guptill as well as Taylor. I have also questioned the tactics that did not promote Ronchi in the batting order. The modern ODI game places more emphasis than ever on SR. That means if a team score is below par, and only 4 wickets were lost for the innings, the batsman can be blamed. Ross faced 120+ balls. Nearly half the innings himself at the business end of the innings.
Ross scored too slowly. 50 off 86 balls, on that pitch, was not acceptable. Given the Zimbabwe bowling attack, its almost inexcusable. Furthermore, not for 2 wickets down batting with Kane looking in fine form. His approach to that innings was all wrong. Neesham batting that way at 4 wickets down would have made more sense. Or maybe NMac at 6 wickets down. But not at 2 wickets down on that pitch. He may have thought that Kane was scoring quickly enough for the two of them given, that approach cannot be taken in ODI cricket these days, even against Zimbabwe.
Besides a loss is a loss, scoring a sub par 300 and losing is the same as scoring 230 and losing, unless the 230 involved efforts by Ronchi and Eliiot to score 365-385 on that pitch.
In the evolved and modern ODI game, "bad hundreds" exist in my opinion. Not all "100's" are good. Noone would challenge that Ross Taylor is a vastly superior batsman to Craig Ervine. But his 100 was completely shown up as result of scoring the first 50 much more quickly, giving more deliveries to "go big" at later. Even Hamilton and Kane showed him up, and they were batting at the top, not the closing.
The last 2 years has seen a dramatic increase in ODI scores. The game has evolved. 5 fielders out now at the end doesn't mean taking it easier in the middle overs.
4 wickets down posting a score, where one wicket was a run out and losing by one over, and the chasing side loses three wickets in the chase, the team batting first did not post enough runs.