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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

New Zealand need to kick the losing habit

Match Facts

Tuesday, December 7
Start time 14.30 (0900 GMT)


Virat Kohli pulls en route to his fourth consecutive 50-plus score in ODIs, India v New Zealand, 3rd ODI, Vadodara, December 4, 2010
Virat Kohli has tormented the New Zealand bowlers, scoring a century and two half-centuries in the three ODIs in the series so far © Associated Press


The Big Picture

August 10, 2010. The day New Zealand last won an international match. As much as winning, losing is a habit too, and New Zealand desperately need to get out of that rut. Dead rubber? Not for them.

What is worse than having lost the series in the first three matches is that they have never looked like winning any of the games. The only positive is, they know why they are not winning, and where they need to improve. Their bowlers haven't looked like getting past the Delhi duo of Gautam Gambhir and Virat Kohli, who have scored 534 runs off 518 balls between them in three ODIs. The batsmen have been directionless: openers fail, middle order goes nowhere, and Scott Styris is left with too much to do. It hasn't helped that they have been without their regular opening pair of Brendon McCullum and Jesse Ryder.

Somehow, though, New Zealand need to find a way to get that winning feeling back against an India side that, on current form and confidence, will be backing itself to go unbeaten through the home season of 2010-11. It will be interesting if New Zealand can get Gambhir and Kohli out cheaply, and test the largely untroubled middle order so far. Daniel Vettori will tell his bowlers that's not asking for a lot.

Form guide

(completed matches, most recent first)
India: WWWWL
New Zealand: LLLLL

Watch out for...

Ross Taylor and Kane Williamson Williamson, batting at No.3, has aggregated 75 runs off 147 deliveries, getting off to a slow start each time, and with not too many big hits to count on, has put the rest of the batting under pressure every time. Surely Taylor, who has succumbed to the resultant pressure twice, has to move up to No.3 and take responsibility for the batting?

M Vijay has twice been the silent partner in opening stands with Gambhir, and has somehow failed to find the fluency he has in Tests and Twenty20s. A career strike-rate of 65 doesn't quite do justice to the way he can play. He will want to make the mental adjustment, and get past his personal best of 33.

Teams

New Zealand's fitness problems haven't made their job any easy. However, they will be hoping that Brendon McCullum can keep wicket, allowing them to add an extra batsman or an extra bowler to the XI.

New Zealand (probable): 1 Brendon McCullum (wk), 2 Martin Guptill, 3 Ross Taylor, 4 Kane Williamson, 5 Scott Styris, 6 James Franklin, 7 Daniel Vettori (capt), 8 Nathan McCullum, 9 Tim Southee/Grant Elliott/Gareth Hopkins, 10 Kyle Mills, 11 Andy McKay

It was strange to see India replace Suresh Raina with Ravindra Jadeja - who has been used as a specialist bowler by MS Dhoni - in the third ODI. Ideally, one out of Saurabh Tiwary and Rohit Sharma should get that slot. With Wriddhiman Saha having already left for South Africa so he can acclimatise himself to the conditions ahead of India's tour there, Parthiv Patel is all set to play his first international in two years and four months.

India (probable): 1 M Vijay, 2 Gautam Gambhir (capt), 3 Virat Kohli, 4 Yuvraj Singh, 5 Yusuf Pathan, 6 Saurabh Tiwary/Rohit Sharma, 7 Parthiv Patel (wk), 8 R Ashwin, 9, 10 and 11 three out of Praveen Kumar, Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra and Munaf Patel

Stats and trivia

  • New Zealand have faced 502 dot balls to India's 417, which sums up New Zealand's approach - or lack of it - in the middle overs.

  • Virat Kohli has now scored 50 or more in four consecutive innings. Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid are the only Indians who have managed more - five. The overall record, a whopping nine, belongs to one of the finest one-day batsmen ever, Javed Miandad.

Quotes

"I've got to ask Ross Taylor [about the wicket] as he knows a lot more than I do. It has got a lot more grass on it and is probably not damp but a little sticky."

Daniel Vettori looks to use Taylor's experience of playing for Royal Challengers Bangalore

"I may just ensure that Yusuf gets to bat with the top-order so he can play enough deliveries and use his destructive batting to good effect."

Gautam Gambhir hints at a change in India's batting order

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