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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Kyle Jamieson's debut show gives New Zealand series despite Jadeja-Saini scare

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Five reasons why New Zealand won the Auckland ODI (3:57)

The highlights include Jamieson's debut, Taylor's fifty, New Zealand's consistent bowling, and more (3:57)

New Zealand 273 for 8 (Guptill 79, Taylor 73*, Jadeja 1-35) beat India (Jadeja 55, Iyer 52, Saini 45, Southee 2-41) by 22 runs

Navdeep Saini!

All the hype around him was that he could bowl fast.

Only here he was staring down a bouncer with a glint in his eye and dispatching it over point for six. Not long after that, he hit boss mode, getting down on one knee and scooping the seam bowlers for four.

Chasing 274, India were down and out at 153 for 7 in the 32nd over. And then their No. 9 had an identity crisis. Dude batted like he was ruddy Kevin Pietersen, making four times the runs his List A average of 12 suggests.

It's as if Eden Park just wouldn't allow for a dead ODI to take place within its borders

There were so many instances of players rising above the ruin to keep this game alive. Ross Taylor's freakish, unbeaten 73 followed on from a collapse of 7 for 55. Ravindra Jadeja batted like he had been to the future and seen that he would score a half-century himself. Nothing he did, or said, gave even the slightest hint that he ever thought a match-winning hand was beyond him. This after a 10-over spell where he gave away only three boundaries.

New Zealand's ninth-wicket partnership scared up 76 runs in 51 balls. India's eighth wicket-partnership - at the height of an impossible chase - made 76 off 86.

Sheesh! Eden Park just cannot deal with even the idea of a boring cricket match. This one ended with New Zealand winning by the skin of their teeth and taking the series 2-0.

The tension was unbelievable. And rather more apparent on the hosts, who may well have felt those twitches that a Super Over brings. They needed three wickets when India needed 121 off 113 balls. Plenty of time. Just stick to the plan.

Jadeja kept pinching singles. Saini twisted his body into every which way to protect his stumps. The equation reduced to 85 off 60. By now, New Zealand had run out of fit players - Mitchell Santner and Scott Kuggeleijn were unwell and many of their first-choice picks including Kane Williamson, who was at the ground, and Trent Boult were still recovering from injury. So their assistant coach Luke Ronchi was yanked out of the dressing room and stuck on the field.

Meanwhile, Jadeja was doing the MS Dhoni thing, biding his time and mining twos from within the 30-yard circle. He didn't seem to mind that the required rate was at 9.7 and the reason for that became immediately apparent when Saini tonked Colin de Grandhomme for three fours in the 44th over, and then sheepishly giggling when his partner would come up to punch gloves.

But, just as it looked like the most improbable finish was on the cards - Saini scoring a fifty and simultaneously unlocking the secret to human flight - a rookie player comes up and knocks his stumps to the ground. Eden Park, man. It really can't help flipping a script.

That Kyle Jamieson strike paved the way to victory, and cemented his candidacy for Man of the Match award. Though honestly, his dismissal of Prithvi Shaw should have sealed it, an incoming delivery storming emphatically through the batsman's defences to wreck his stumps.

Tim Southee must have been pleased in the end. He was not at all well on Saturday. He was a doubt even to play but then it became apparent that New Zealand wouldn't even have an XI to put on the park if he took the day off. So he put on his black cap and put in a truly big-hearted performance. He wasn't on the pitch when it all ended, raising the possibility that he bowled out (2-41) well before he otherwise would have simply to go to the dressing room and rest. But, as he was leaving every single one of his team-mates raced up to him, from the captain Tom Latham to one of their best ever Taylor and even the debutant Jamieson, and patted his back.

Southee is no longer the wicket-taking machine he once was, often swinging the ball in ways that made people question basic physics. But he stands up in adversity. He leads when no one wants to. He did that in Australia when New Zealand were robbed of Boult and Lockie Ferguson. He did it again in Auckland, clean bowling Virat Kohli at the start of the chase to provide his team the foothold they needed to win the game.

It was beautiful to watch New Zealand execute their plan for the Indian captain. They had three slips to start and continued with at least two catchers through the first 20 balls he faced. Most experts would attest that is the period when every batter is at their most vulnerable. Also, they bowled one side of the wicket, the off side namely, and blocked out his cover drive. Kohli had made only nine runs in this time and was eventually forced to try and drag balls into the leg side if he wanted his score to move.

This was where Southee wanted Kohli to be. He rolled out the cross-seamer. It cut in off the pitch. The batsman played around it and was bowled. However well India fought after that - and they did, with Shreyas Iyer scoring a fifty as well, that wicket, much as it did in the World Cup semi-final, was crucial.

It meant New Zealand don't have to look back so wistfully at their own batting collapse. Losing 7 for 55 had ripped away much of the tension from a game that was building up beautifully. Ha! As if such a thing could ever happen in Auckland.

Taylor killed all possibility of a dull game by playing an absolute blinder. His ninth-wicket partnership with Jamieson - who scored a century while facing James Anderson and Stuart Broad in a tour game in 2018 - was entirely ridiculous.

It came after New Zealand had lurched from 142 for 1 to 197 for 8 thanks to the pressure India exerted through the middle overs. To think that was the period where they won the game in Hamilton. Taylor and Tom Latham ransacked 117 runs in overs 30-40 without even looking like losing a wicket a few days ago. Here, New Zealand stopped and stumbled and crashed and burned to 32 for 4 in that phase.

Taylor was 29 off 47 when the eighth wicket fell and his side didn't look like it would last the remaining nine overs. He had already been part of two run-outs that stole all the momentum away from the innings, especially the one that cost Martin Guptill his wicket when he looked well set on 79. A straightforward chase was on the cards and Eden Park was all set to be marred by that most awful of things - a boring cricket match.

But then that magic that surrounds this ground, which is home to the Grant Elliot miracle, the Marcus Stoinis heartbreak and the Kane Williamson fist pump, began to show itself.

Taylor was completely infused with it. Sure, 14 years in the international arena does help a guy overcome such a hopeless situation but where's the fun in that narrative? It's much more compelling to imagine an otherworldly force enabling Taylor to reverse-scoop the best fast bowler in the world nearly all the way for six, with the back of his bat. Jasprit Bumrah does not get treated like this. By anyone. Heck, even the new kid Jamieson was whacking fours off him at the death.

Eden Park just cannot deal with even the idea of a boring cricket match.

India 2nd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st21MA AgarwalPP Shaw
2nd13V KohliPP Shaw
3rd23V KohliSS Iyer
4th14KL RahulSS Iyer
5th25KM JadhavSS Iyer
6th33RA JadejaSS Iyer
7th24RA JadejaSN Thakur
8th76RA JadejaNA Saini
9th22RA JadejaYS Chahal
10th0RA JadejaJJ Bumrah