Dan Vettori.
New Zealand cricket captain Daniel Vettori slammed his
batsmen for their soft dismissals which handed Australia the
Chappell-Hadlee Trophy on a platter here tonight.
After a flying start at 120 for one in the 20th over, New
Zealand's batsmen imploded to be dismissed for 238 off 44.1
overs at Eden Park as Australia cantered to a six-wicket
victory in their rain-reduced target with 17 balls to spare.
It sealed them the series 3-1 with Saturday's fifth ODI to
spare.
Said Vettori: "They were the same mistakes as the previous
two games and it's really hard to expand on.
"It was about not putting enough runs on the board, losing
wickets at crucial times and putting ourselves under far too
much pressure. When you do that against Australia you get
yourself in trouble.
"Most of the dismissals were relatively soft. They're just
poor mistakes and whether it is the mental shift from
aggressiveness to accumulation I'm not sure. They're mistakes
that shouldn't happen.
" Despite failing to bat out their overs for a second
straight match, the Duckworth-Lewis calculation method
assisted New Zealand as the tourists were assigned a target
of 200 off 34 overs.
Vettori (2-29) and Shane Bond (1-28) were both on song but
Tim Southee went for 55 off 5.1 overs while Daryl Tuffey and
James Franklin also suffered with the ball.
"It's a funny system (Duckworth-Lewis). I said after the
second game that I didn't quite understand it. It gave us an
opportunity," Vettori said.
"Bondy and myself put some pressure on with the ball but we
couldn't maintain it from both ends and that really hurts
against Australia."
Victorious captain Ricky Ponting admitted he thought his side
had been dudded by the 90-minute rain delay but on Eden
Park's small boundaries a run rate of around six an over was
comfortable.
"I actually thought it (calculation) might have been wrong...
that was about 30 runs too many," he said.
"It shows none of those equations will ever be perfect. We
probably needed to be rewarded more for having bowled them
out in 44 overs.
"But when you're chasing 200 off 34 over on a ground like
that, 200 in a Twenty20 game's probably a good score out
here." Australia retained the trophy for a third consecutive
series and Ponting said it at last banished the memory of the
0-3 hiding they received in New Zealand in 2007.
"It doesn't matter how many games you've played in between,
you always remember the last series, especially if it's a
losing one. That was on the eve of the World Cup and we were
thoroughly outplayed.
"With little time between the games it's been a good effort
from us to turn things around and in the last two games play
our best two."
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