-Kiwis thrash Ireland to secure berth in Semis
Sports Desk
MELBOURNE: A Kane Williamson half-century and a spin bowling assault fired New Zealand to a 35-run win over Ireland at the Adelaide Oval on Friday to all but book their place in the T20 World Cup semi-finals.
New Zealand’s batsmen posted an imposing 185 for six after Ireland elected to field before the Black Caps’ bowlers restricted the Irish to 150 for nine.
The win saw Williamson’s team cement top spot in Group 1 with seven points and a huge run-rate advantage over second-placed England and third-placed Australia.
New Zealand’s semi-final berth will almost certainly be confirmed later on
Friday with the result of the Australia-Afghanistan match at the same venue.
Australia can join New Zealand on seven points but would need an improbable victory margin to dislodge the Black Caps from top spot by virtue of a superior net run-rate.
Ireland bow out of the World Cup but head home with pride after a solid tournament capped by a sparkling hat-trick to paceman Josh Little.
Left-armer Little had captain Williamson caught for 61, then trapped both James Neesham and Mitchell Santner lbw for no score in the 19th over to bring up Ireland’s second hat-trick in T20 internationals.
However, the damage had already been done by Williamson and middle order batsman Daryl Mitchell (31 not out).
Paul Stirling and Andy Balbirnie gave Ireland a fighting chance but left-arm spinner Santner broke the 68-run partnership when he had Balbirnie chopping onto his stumps.
Santner and legspinner Ish Sodhi then rattled through the top order, grabbing two wickets each to suck the life out of the Irish innings.
“We knew the spin would really come into the game and they bowled beautifully well,” said Williamson. “A good team effort, really.” Paceman Lockie Ferguson finished with an economical 3-22 after Ireland’s chase unraveled.
Meanwhile, Glenn Maxwell hit an unbeaten half-century to keep Australia in the hunt for the semi-finals of the Twenty20 World Cup with a tense four-run win over Afghanistan on Friday.
The hosts and defending champions now need arch-rivals England to lose their final Super 12 match against Sri Lanka on Saturday to make the semis.
The result ensured New Zealand, who outplayed Ireland in the first match of the day at the Adelaide Oval, booked their final-four spot from Group 1.
Maxwell’s 32-ball 54 lifted Australia to 168-8 in the face of an effervescent Afghan bowling attack, a total the home bowlers defended by restricting the Afghans to 164-7.
Rashid Khan blazed an unbeaten 48 off 23 balls to make a fist of the chase and he smashed 16 runs off the final over from Marcus Stoinis to keep the home crowd on edge almost right to the end.
“We’ll stay here and watch that game, hoping for a bit of an upset,” Matthew Wade, captain in place of injured Australia skipper Aaron Finch, said of the England game in Sydney.
“Bit slow out of the blocks this tournament, hopefully it doesn’t cost us.” Australia lost Finch and Tim David to hamstring injuries and dropped pace bowler Mitchell Starc before being invited to bat first in what was a must-win match for the hosts.
Naveen-ul-Haq rocked Australia’s top order with the wickets of David Warner, for 28, and the returning Steve Smith, for four, in one over. He returned impressive figures of 3-21.
The left-handed Warner came out firing to smash spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman for three straight boundaries in the second over of the match. He lost fellow opener Cameron Green off Fazalhaq Farooqi, who took two wickets, in the next over but kept up the attack with Mitchell Marsh, who hit 45 off 30 balls.
Naveen bowled Warner and four balls later the fast bowler trapped Smith lbw. Marsh attempted to hit back with a six and two fours off Gulbadin Naib but failed to build on it and he fell caught behind to Mujeeb’s mystery spin.
Maxwell and Stoinis, who hit Australia’s fastest T20 50 — in 17 balls — in the win over Sri Lanka, then got going against the Afghan bowlers, only for Rashid Khan to break through. Stoinis smashed Rashid for a six over mid-wicket but soon departed for 25 as Afghanistan kept chipping away.