By Paritosh Pramanik :
THE lean frame, which Abhishek
Sharma's presentation does not reveal
the actual power he possesses.
The left-handed opener can clear
any distance, and his power-packed batting was on display
on Wednesday night when the
25-year-old cracked 84 from 35
deliveries to help India post a total
which New Zealand could not
achieve here at VCA’s Jamtha
Stadium. The target of 239 was
too steep for the Black Caps as
they could muster 190-7 in 20
overs.
India showed a perfect blueprint of their attacking batting
style which will be on display in
next two months are going into the
home T20 World Cup as they
went on to record a 48-run
win to lead the five-match series
1-0.
New Zealand knew the chase
wouldn’t be easy with India having world-class bowlers in
Arshdeep Singh (1-31), Hardik
Pandya (1-20), Varun
Chakravarthy (2-37), and Shivam
Dube (2-28). Buried under a
mountain of 238 runs, they succumbed. They perished as India
avenged the decade-old defeat
at the same venue with a commanding victory.
A packed explosive batting
line-up attacked New Zealand
bowlers with disdain hitting 14
sixes and 21 boundaries to make
mockery of the visiting bowling
line-up. Along with captain
Suryakumar Yadav, who became
the fourth player to play 100 T20Is
for India, Sharma added 99 runs
for the third wicket after India
had lost Sanju Samson (10) and
Ishan Kishan (8) by the third over.
That partnership laid the foundation for a big score. With a late
flourish from Rinku Singh, who
hit an unbeaten 44 from 20 balls,
India showed who’s the boss in
the shortest format of the game.
Sharma was brutal on all New
Zealand bowlers. After playing a
couple of dot deliveries, he made
his intentions clear with a straight
six off the tall Jacob Duffy to set
the ball is rolling. From then on,
his powerful shots were on display with Yadav being the spectator at the other end. Yadav,
going through a lean patch, made
sure he played second fiddle to
his partner. He hit some of his
trademark shots and did find
gaps to pick up boundaries. Once,
the captain stepped out and
placed the ball into the gap to
collect a boundary towards the
long-on fence.
Prior to that, he
went on his knees to slog it over
the square leg boundary for a
beautiful four.
Meanwhile, Sharma was
unstoppable. His six off Mitchell
Santner in the 11th over sailed
into the stands with the fielder
becoming a spectator. There were
shades of Yuvraj Singh in his batting. He bent on his knees a bit
but kept his body straight as he
sent the ball over the ropes for
another six. His entertaining
innings came to an end in the
12th over when he holed up a
skier off Ish Sodhi to Kyle
Jamieson.
Surya made 32, Pandya
important 25 but it was the late
cameo from Rinku Singh, a 44
from 20 deliveries (4x4, 3x6)
which kept the run rate high.
Rinku took 21 from the last over
bowled by Darly Mitchell which
had two sixes and as many fours
to put India in total control.
New Zealand’s chase was stuttering. They lost two quick wickets inside two overs with
Arshdeep and Pandya striking in
their respective first overs.
Glenn
Phillips (78; 40b, 4x4, 6x6) and
Tim Robinson (21; 15b, 2x4, 1x6)
tried to steady the ship with 51
runs from 31 deliveries for the
third wicket, but Chakravarthy
gave India another breakthrough
getting the latter’s scalp in the
7th over. Phillips and Mark
Chapman (39; 24b, 4x4, 2x6) were
involved in a crucial 79-run stand
for the fourth wicket.Phillips tried to dominate.
He
hit Axar for a four and a six but
the bowler had the last laugh as
he got him caught by Dube at
long-on boundary as New Zealand slumped to 131-4 and
then 143 for five in the 15th over
and then ended their innings at
190-7 in 20 overs.