New Zealand switch focus to ODI series against England

Teams to clash in first tie of three-match series today in Hamilton.


Reuters February 16, 2013
New Zealand captain McCullum hopes his team can make a positive comeback after going down 2-1 to England in the Twenty20 series. PHOTO: AFP

HAMILTON:


New Zealand’s ability to ‘bounce back’, as captain Brendon McCullum described it, will be seriously put to the test in the first match of their One-Day International (ODI) series against England in Hamilton today.


“We expected to win the T20 series coming into it and we’re disappointed to lose it,” McCullum told reporters in Wellington on Friday, after being beaten in the final Twenty20 game by 10 wickets to go down 2-1 in that series.

“But I expect us to bounce back strongly in the first of the one-dayers. That’s a characteristic of this team at the moment. We have the ability to bounce back and we are going to have to do so because England will be very confident.”

The three-match ODI series against Alastair Cook’s team brings added significance to McCullum’s side as they look towards the 2015 World Cup that New Zealand will co-host with Australia.

New Zealand are playing their best cricket in the 50-over format, having beaten South Africa 2-1 in a series last month.

“It’s less frenetic. You can play okay in parts of the game but you’re not necessarily out of it,” said McCullum, when asked if the 50-over game was more suited to his team’s style.

“In one-day cricket, because it lasts a fraction longer, you are able to fight your way back into the game and I think we have a reasonable game plan especially with our batting and obviously we welcome back Kyle Mills who’s an experienced bowler for us in that form of the game.”



England’s Twenty20 captain Stuart Broad, who now hands over to one-day and Test skipper Cook, said he felt the quick turnaround would not be a problem for the team, given the arrival of world-class players like Cook and off-spinner Graeme Swann.

“We have not met up as a one-day group yet,” said Broad. “The guys who have had a month or three weeks off will obviously be finding their way back into cricket and it’s not easy to do in international cricket.

“It’s a pretty tight schedule and it will be important we pick up where we left off (on Friday).” 

Published in The Express Tribune, February 17th, 2013.

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