Pretty cheap & over-simplistic point tbh. I don't think CG was implying Taylor was the only player to blame for the loss, that's certainly not the way I read it.
I know it seems the easy and popular thing to oversimplify it & jump all over CG for critiquing a player who just scored a 100, the only problem is his critique of Taylor's first half of his innings is actually quite valid, especially with hindsight when you look back at how the respective teams approached their batting.
It's not 2002 anymore, where a score of 300 wins 95% of matches. That was a very good wicket (even if a little on the slow side), where batsmen could hit through the line and the outfield was incredibly fast. In hindsight it was probably a 320-330 par pitch. Therefore it's fair to say there was a lack of urgency in NZ's innings (particular from Taylor) after he and Williamson they did well to weather the early storm, which admittedly needed to be done. This doesn't mean the other NZ batsmen who failed and the bowlers who were loose shouldn't receive criticism either, but your reply seems to suggest that because Taylor scored a hundred, he should be immune from any criticism at all, even though anyone who watched the innings could see he was sucking up far too many dot balls.
Anyway, I'm sure we'll see more urgency in the batting in the next game, particularly if NZ bat first.
Thanks Zinzan. You and I agree that in the modern ODI game, there can be bad 100's.
Some stats:
KW outscored Ross in partnership: 89 runs to 46:
Elliot outscored Ross in partnership: 43 runs to 35:
Ross 50: (86) (far too slow)
Ross 53: (92) (end of 40 over)
Ross 61: (97) (end of 42 over)
Ross 70: (100) (end of 43 over)
Ross 81: (106) (end of 46 over)
Ross 92: (110) (end of 47 over)
Ross 97: (114) (end of 48 over)
Hit next ball for four.
I don't think that is an appreciable concern through the 90's as someone else mentioned. But the first 92 balls were far too slow. 53/92 is a SR of 58. That was unacceptable on that pitch. Totally unacceptable in the match conditions, it was two wickets down for most his innings, not 5 or 6. The acceleration at the end, that is the expected norm these days. Whether it him scoring those runs, or Neesham and Ronchi. 50 off 30 balls is hardly special these days, its getting rather more typical, especially for a batsman who has already faced 86 deliveries. This is the Amla, De Villiers, Kohli, Raina, Maxwell, Faulkner, Anderson, Ronchi, Williamson era of ODI cricket. SR has more value than ever before.