Well, well, well...
This will probably be the toughest blog I've had to write. Don't want to get carried away, but .... wow, that's a great feeling; beating the Australians in their own back yard. We arrived here to a newspaper headline, "Even This Useless Mob Think They Can Beat Us." Well, actually, yes we did think we could win, and mate, we did.
That is as good a feeling I have ever experienced in cricket. The elation in the changing room after Dan hit the last ball of the match through the field for the winning run was pure, an amazing feeling. That's the most 'man love' I have ever seen in a changing room. It was just one match in a series of five, but after a game that roller-coasted until the last ball, our loss to the PM's XI and in the heat and conditions that we played in, we were one very happy bunch of boys!
I was nervous, and excited, heading into this match. My last ODI, my first one, didn't go so good; six overs, 1 for 59 in two three-over spells. Not good enough, hence it was my one and only match before yesterday. We lost the toss and bowled first, we probably would have batter first too had Dan [Vettori] kept up his run with the tosses. It was hot, and humid. This was going to be hard work which was part of the reason we were keen to bat first so that we could bowl in the cooler conditions. I passed Shaun Tait as we were walking heading off from warm-ups, just after the toss, he was pretty pleased he didn't have to bowl first up in the heat, and I couldn't blame him. Our 'Dirtys' and management crew did a great job around the boundaries and onto the field with the drinks. The boundary riders got drinks handed to them from the other side of the rope and the inner-circle fielders got drinks run out to them at great pace so to not slow down the play by the 'Dirtys'. These small efforts often go unnoticed but can add so much to the team's performance.
[Kyle] Millsy and Timmy [Southee] started the innings off well with the ball; both had it swinging and gave the openers very little to hit. Warner had looked dangerous since his debut in the Twenty20 v the South Africa; we were certainly weary of his abilities and Shaun Marsh had looked pretty solid. To have them both out within the first nine overs was the best start we could have asked for. Then a piece of brilliance from Neil Broom in the outfield, an amazing throw to run Ponting out was all we could have asked for. And as if lightning doesn't strike twice, Guptill, with an equally great throw, ran Michael Clarke out as he too came back for the second. That's four down, the top four, and we couldn't be happier.
I had started my overs by now and had started pretty well. Two balls stood out in my first spell though, one that went screaming through the covers to the fence and then another that met the fence quickly at midwicket as I dropped too short, with not enough on it, to Clarke after bowling him a good bouncer. A couple of poor follow-up balls, which let the pressure off, frustrated me.
Four-over spell to start with. Then I came back for a two-over blast and then finished up with four overs in a row at the end of the innings.
I have been bowling for Wellington in the batting Powerplay and have felt like I've done pretty well, I wanted to bowl in it for NZ too and I got my chance. My three last overs were in the Powerplay. Hussey and Hopes were in and it was time for them to take the attack to us. We had done quite a bit of scouting on both of these guys for this time of the innings so we had our plans pretty well-set. And it worked. I picked them both up in the first Powerplay over much to my, and our, relief. Both these boys are dangerous and by dismissing them pulled back the total that we would be chasing. Huss and Hopes were caught inside the ring, both mid-on and mid-off were up and that was the gamble, it worked. This Powerplay can work both ways, it's, obviously, a chance to score big runs, but for the fielding team it is a genuine opportunity to take wickets with the batsmen getting a touch more expansive.
We bowled pretty well at the death and Millsy picked up his fourth wicket of the innings, another fantastic performance from one of the world's best.
With 182 to win, it was the worst possible start we could have asked for. Baz [McCullum] was unlucky in the second ball of the innings after getting an inside edge into his pad to be given out lbw. Not much you can do about it. Then we lost Fults and Gup with the score on 25. Three for 25 and Australia have got the start they would need to halt us in our chase. It's not too often you see three slips in a one-day match but with Tait bowling fast and with a little bit of shape Australia had the lot in; attack and leave no questions unanswered.
We were a little nervous up in the shed; we knew it wasn't going to be the easiest chase on that deck. A 39-run partnership restored a little bit of composure to the scoreboard. Broomy and Rossco [Taylor] then put on 42 for the next wicket and we're looking good again, then Rossco and Millsy put on the best 62-run partnership I think I've ever seen and got us within 14 of the 182 we needed. It was here that things started to get a bit twitchy in the changing room. Rossco was dismissed with 12 runs left and 15 balls remaining; now it was going to be tight. I headed out the back of the viewing room to get padded up and ready for whatever scenario was going to be set for me.
Eight down, four runs needed, every chance that I was going to have to bat or at least get out there for a ball or two. I was really quite excited about it, actually looking forward to being out there when the winning runs were going to be scored, possibly having the chance to get them. It's a whole world away but I've had the chance for Wellington in similar situations to get out there and finish a game off with success so I was backing myself to be able to do whatever was asked, bat on ball and run as fast as I can!
I wasn't needed, Jeets, coolly scored two of the two balls he faced and Dan hit the last ball through the field for the remaining run to win. Hugs, cheers, high fives, you name it, we were enjoying it. What a feeling!
We stayed in the changing room till rather late on Sunday night, much to the displeasure of the security that had to stay at the ground till we left. Sorry guys, but we were having fun! We had a travel day yesterday, in Melbourne now preparing for the next match on Friday at the 'G'. I can't wait! Got a few friends to catch up with here, should be a good stay, I'm just hoping the temps stay down a bit!
What do you think of the Broom Dismissal, I haven't seen the replay but I heard it was a shocker
And was the last ball of the the match a four or a single. I saw it go to the boundary but cricinfo says its a single.
Posted by: Paul at February 3, 2009 4:10 AM
Well done Ian, That was a fantastic bowling performance from all the boys. And to pick up 2 wickets for 1 run in the first batting powerplay over was pretty extraordinary.
It was a shame that most of the top order failed however. McCullum was terribly unlucky of course, as was Broom. (We've all heard too much about that, good on you for not getting involved in that discussion.) But Ross Taylor continued to impress with his new found maturity and excellent strokeplay. A really classy and intelligent innings from him, bar one shot which went perilously close to being caught at third man.
Good luck for the next game. I've only recently started reading these blogs since the West Indies tour but they are a really good read. Nice to get an independent point of view from an international sportsperson. Keep up the good work! Here's to 2 nil up after Melbourne.
Posted by: Swami at February 3, 2009 4:27 AM
Was expecting you to comment on Haddin .. guess you safely chose not to.
Posted by: Alex at February 3, 2009 4:27 AM
Great stuff! As soon as you took those wickets in the PowerPlay I was looking forward to the Blog.
Steering clear of the 'Haddin' incident then? What was the reaction in the dressing room like at the time?
Posted by: Bhagyesh at February 3, 2009 4:47 AM
Hey congrats to you and NZ .. I love Aussie lose ..Good game .. hope you guys continue to be competitive.
Cheers !
Posted by: beau at February 3, 2009 4:58 AM
Good on ya, Iain. Great bowling from you and all the guys. Your opening powerplay over was a ripper. Mills, Taylor and Vettori were great, but I think that over had as much to do with the win as anything. As an Aussie who has supported the Black Caps for years, I was on the edge of my seat towards the end of the chase. Your batsmen sure made us sweat, but that just made it all the sweeter when that glide from Dan zipped through the covers. A real win for the bowlers, this one. Great stuff. Four more, please!
Posted by: Marcus at February 3, 2009 5:34 AM
I was there for the second innings, and it was one of the best matches I've ever been to. Congratulations on a well-earned win.
Posted by: Shankar at February 3, 2009 6:02 AM
Ian,Congrats.
Excellent Bowling.
Bowl well in the remaining ODI also.
ALL THE BEST BLACKCAPS.
Posted by: Ben A. at February 3, 2009 6:08 AM
Very diplomatic on Broom's dismissal there Iain...well done though, it was the bowling effort that won the game and without Ponting for them there now I hope you guys can really turn the screws on Friday for win number 2. Can't say I'd have been keen for a bat in that last over!
Posted by: malik at February 3, 2009 6:54 AM
congrats on the win!!! Your bowling lot did a great job on keeping the target low. However, eventhough a couple of umpiring decisions went against you guys, I felt that you guys made a mess out of it. I felt bad for Ross not being able to carry through his bat, he deserved to. Buck up ur batters mate! tell them the way Bracken is bowling, a target of 250+ would be really hard for u guys. Best of luck, hope u beat them aussies again!
Posted by: Jojy John Alphonso at February 3, 2009 7:37 AM
Yup, I was rooting for NZ throughout the match and was very happy that you guys pulled through. I just hope you guys defy odds and come out victors in this series. With rumours of Ponting sitting out through the next ODI, I guess you guys do have a very good chance of beating.
This ODI series is truly interesting and I am looking forward to some really good matches.
Will look forward to your posts too :)
Posted by: sam at February 3, 2009 7:41 AM
to show nz's worth they must win this series and preferably 4-1 aus are really struggling so they wont get a better opportunity
Posted by: sam at February 3, 2009 7:41 AM
to show nz's worth they must win this series and preferably 4-1 aus are really struggling so they wont get a better opportunity
Posted by: Jermain at February 3, 2009 8:18 AM
Well done lads. Always good to see supposed underdogs have their day. Even more so when it is against the bully boys of international cricket. Hopefully the celebrations don;t go on too long and you can crank up the pressure on the Aussies with a couple of more wins.
Posted by: Scott Fisher at February 3, 2009 8:26 AM
Great win by the boys at the WACA, nice bowling performance followed up by clutch batting from taylor and mills.Kudos to you Mr. O' Brien for working your way back to the team and also for not causing more controversory by discussing the Broom dismissal.
Posted by: Ed at February 3, 2009 8:58 AM
Fantastic performance, great to watch. Probably the best bowling display by us all summer. I think we gave away 2 extras, and that was it. Aussie gave away a fair few, and that may have made the difference at the end of the day. Looking forward to Friday.
Posted by: syam krishnan at February 3, 2009 9:01 AM
it feels so good when teams come to oz and beat them..the downfall of the invincibles ... aah!!
nd best f luck Ian...
keep bowling... keep blogging..!!!
u r too good in both!
cheers
Posted by: syam krishnan at February 3, 2009 9:05 AM
it feels so good when teams come to oz and beat them..the downfall of the invincibles ... aah!!
nd best f luck Ian...
keep bowling... keep blogging..!!!
u r too good in both!
cheers
Posted by: Frank Poe at February 3, 2009 9:55 AM
Nice article Iain. Keep them coming.
Posted by: Rahul at February 3, 2009 10:14 AM
Shot Ian. Great win. i was supporting Oz but you bowling really well along with mills and vettori and that really unsportsman decision on Neil Broom's wicket showed me a bit about how desperate australia are to win. i will continue to support OZ but best of luck for the rest of the tour and im waiting for the next time you play Sri Lanka as i am originally from there myself. anyway keep the blogs coming, they are really good.
Posted by: Anand at February 3, 2009 10:42 AM
I thought you would share your thoughts on Haddin getting a wicket for clarke and also on the Dan's runout that was not given .. But good way to start with. Hope you guys hit all the nails on the coffin. Aussies are down keep'm there mate.
Good luck with rest of the matches.
Posted by: Dickson from Wainui at February 3, 2009 11:20 AM
Nice article Iain, I see no mention of the Broom controversy, I take it you might have been told to keep tight-lipped?? Good game that one, Mulls and Rigor from Crowd goes Wild loved seeing you guys win it too. Sock it to 'em in the next one for all us Kiwis, and if all else fails, make 'em answer for that awful soundtrack that they call an accent there.
Posted by: SKS at February 3, 2009 12:58 PM
What about the controvery regarding HADDIN? What was your first rection? Do reply, if u havent been instructed not to speak on "Such"
topics?
Posted by: Nick at February 3, 2009 1:19 PM
Great stuff and well played. Lets see 5-0 and next time Haddin reaches in front of the stumps give him a whack on the hands...
Posted by: Tom at February 3, 2009 7:36 PM
Have been following your blog since it's inception but feel it is now being vetted and has become as bland as an NZPA press release.
If you are not even going to mention something as huge as the Haddin incident hardly seems worth reading.
Well done though, I am flying over for the SCG game.
Another nailbiter with a Black caps win please.!
Posted by: Anthony at February 4, 2009 6:12 AM
What a great win Iain! congrats mate in making history as havent won since 1988 at the WACCA. Keep up the hard work in the next game, please dont let it slip as have a great chance to win this seris. Cheers :)
Posted by: Uday at February 4, 2009 9:29 AM
How can Ponting say such stupid things. Why should Vettori apologize. It is such a shame. Broom was clearly not out. Haddin should at least look at the replays and shut up. Entire Australian cricket fraternity should be ashamed of this incident. And look at how well they handled it. Sore losers!
Posted by: Naresh Sharma at February 5, 2009 6:54 AM
CONGRATS man!! a great effort by you guys.. n i enjoyed your bowling a lot especially that power play over you mentioned!! :)
n kudos to u for not bringing up dat broom incident here.. it is very easy to get carried away but u r a true professional!! beat those aussies in the remaining matches fair n square so that they r never able to do such horrendous things on the field!!
Posted by: Kauffman at February 6, 2009 12:01 PM
A quick word of congrats to you and the lads on now being 2-0. AWESOME STUFF!!!
Beautiful bowling you at the death and welldone on the two big scorers wickets.
I'm believing you and the guys can make it 3 and 0
Posted by: bala at February 7, 2009 5:12 AM
well it looks like "you useless mob" have done it twice.congrats !! all the best to wrap up the series in sydney.
Posted by: Will at February 7, 2009 11:48 PM
great game guys
Iain, if only 1 run is required and the batsmen hits a 4, if they complete the run before the ball crosses the boundary rope it is only counted as 1, because the completed run wins the game and effectively renders the ball dead. interesting that it was only called 1 though, because i thought the ball crossed the boundary first. doesn't really matter though
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Iain O'Brien
must type as fast as he bowls. After stumps most days he adds to his popular personal blog, covering his take on the play, dressing room snippets and personal insights (he really doesn’t like bouncers). A fast-medium bowler, O’Brien has become a regular member of the New Zealand Test side over the past year and is enjoying his time at the top.