What a start to the World Twenty20. The results so far have got the whole cricket world talking, the Dutch in particular; not that I can understand what they say, but they’re talking!
Since my last post we have now played three T20 matches; warm-up matches vs India and Australia and then our opening match vs Scotland on Saturday.
The match vs India was a great event. Just like at home the Indian supporters outnumbered the Kiwi support in the crowd and easily made the most noise, this made for a great atmosphere out in the middle at Lord’s. This was my first match at Lord’s, I had been the 12th man in the Test match there last summer which I was disappointed about, although if you have to be 12th man anywhere in the world, Lord’s is the place to be it; the food is outstanding and the training facilities are fantastic, so I ate loads of great food and trained as hard as I could.
This time I was playing, we batted first and scored 170 for 7. This is about the score we think will be very competitive in this competition and to get there with some great knocks throughout our batting line up was a great way to start our first full-on warm-up match.
I opened the bowling and got off to a handy start, just five off my first over. That helps the nerves quite a bit! My next over wasn’t so good, well, it wasn’t a bad over in the way that I bowled badly, I actually bowled the over pretty well, Rohit just smashed me to all parts. He hit me from some pretty good lengths and continued his form from the IPL. Dan [Vettori] then did what Dan does best; he came on, picked up two wickets in his first over and changed the course of the match. It was through this middle period that we pegged it back and managed to get our noses back in front and we stayed that way till the end. With a couple of overs left in the match a chant of “Kiwi, Kiwi...” erupted from a section of the crowd, this was a buzz. Such a long way from home and our supporters that have to put up with a lot of indifferent results made my skin tingle, made me even more proud to be a Kiwi. Brilliant!
A pretty happy bunch of lads knowing that this win, our third in a row against India, and this time against a 13-strong Indian team, was what we needed in terms of knowing where we were in our preparation.
We played the next evening at The Oval against Australia. We were really surprised at the crowd for this one too, a real good turnout just for a warm-up match. This time we let down the supporters that had turned out to watch. We scored 147 which, in the end was a spectacular score as we were 21 for 5 by the sixth over. Scotty and Peter did a great job to get us back in the game and give us a score that wasn’t quite enough but it was one we could try to defend. We couldn’t defend it and Australia knocked it off pretty comfortable in the last over.
Which brings us to the start of the competition ...
The tournament opened with a shock, a pumped-up Netherlands knocked over England at Lord’s. This was not the kind of result we wanted with our match coming up the next day vs another of the minnow nation teams, Scotland at The Oval. This kind of result would have given Scotland a huge amount of confidence heading into our match and when, because of weather, our match was shortened into a seven-over per innings game it made our match that much more of a lottery.
We didn’t bowl well either but we did learn a big lesson about a shortened match; we should have gone to death bowling earlier. Normally, in a T20, you’d go to death bowling in around the 15th over so that’s six overs of death bowling. We were only in the field for seven overs on Saturday and maybe should have even started in death mode and just look to restrict the scoring as opposed to trying to bowl normal lengths looking to restrict the run flow that way.
My first over went for 18, 16 off the bat and two leg-byes. Not good enough. I hit the lengths I wanted to but I should have changed, earlier in my over, and bowled differently. I hadn’t bowled the two previous days before this match as my back had locked up and doing anything that involved bending hurt. I got through warm-ups really well and knew that I was going to be fine to play. My back had freed up and I felt good bowling before the match. I was really disappointed to have gone for so many in the first over of the match and given Scotland some momentum and confidence. It’s this kind of momentum that can really change a game and I didn’t do my role well enough, that said, Scotland came out, swung hard, hit the ball pretty clean and rode their luck a little. Anyway you look at it though, it wasn’t good enough from most of us with the ball. Scotland scored an amazing 89 in their seven overs.
Half-time and our changing room was pretty nervous. We knew we could do it, knock the runs off, but there is the still the scary thought of being upset in our opening match and then being in the horrible position, like England are, of having to knock over one of the favourites, South Africa for us, to stay in the tournament.
Our batting was special; it was going to have to be if we were to win at any case. Nine fours and five sixes makes chasing any total easier and that was the base of our chase. We chased down 89 in just six overs and won with an over spare which is an even more staggering. At the finish of the match there wasn’t that normal victory feeling, sure we had won, sure we had done it well in the end, but we made it hard for ourselves and caused us to worry more than we should have had we got it right with the ball.
There was a tough review of the match later in the afternoon I came under some pretty heavy scrutiny, as I should have and have learnt again about this game.
I’ll catch you back here in a couple of days with a bit more background on what we’re up to at trainings and in preparation for our next match vs South Africa.
Hi Iain,
Congrats on your team's win against Scotland.You are now already in the Super Eights,only that you need to go in there with a win against your name.It was refreshing to see Brendon 'Baz' McCullum help his team to a win after his disastrous stint in the IPL.Kiwi cricket indeed is headed for good times with Shane Bond and Lou Vincent set to return.Ian Butler did an amazing job and I'm looking forward to you complementing his efforts.I'm also looking forward to the older McCullum,Nathan,to display his firepower.I suggest you let the McCullum brothers open the innings :)
Posted by: Dinkar at June 8, 2009 3:09 PM
Congrts! Ian for such a nice win
Posted by: Winston at June 8, 2009 3:41 PM
Its four in a row against India Iain. (4 out of 4)
Keep up the good work
Posted by: Nishith at June 8, 2009 4:14 PM
Its always pleasure to read your blogs. All the best for rest of matches.
Posted by: Evan Jacobson at June 8, 2009 10:53 PM
G'day Iain..I don't think it really matters what areas you hit (or miss) in a 7 over slogfest you are going to be despatched to all parts especially on a good deck like the Oval...who would want to be a bowler in that situation huh?
Just look at Brett Lee's effort up against Gayle,he was generating good pace and hitting the deck in reasonable areas but Gayle was able to manipulate the crease and open his hips up and the faster Lee bowled the further it went off the middle of the bat.
I wouldn't beat yourself up over your performance against the Jocks as nobody was immuned,although Butler's performance was impressive everybody who rolled their arm over was up aginst it.
Interesting tactic you guys employed using McGlashan to run down to the non strikers end to field the throw ins from the Long On and Long Off Boundary riders.Whats the theroy behind that innovation? It could work a treat for run outs at the bowlers end but could leave you exposed at the keepers end perhaps?Good Luck!
Posted by: Harish at June 8, 2009 11:21 PM
hehe.. fun read!! keep up the good work both on the field and off it (here!)
Posted by: Enigma at June 8, 2009 11:28 PM
I love your blogs, Iain. Best of luck against South Africa.
Posted by: JMKRaja at June 9, 2009 1:32 AM
Ian, nice blog mate.. really felt sorry for you while you were hammered all round the ground by a Minnow Team :-( ..
I'm eagerly waiting for June-16th match(D2 vs A1) which i guess you will play against INDIA -literally a Quarter finals..
Posted by: Sam Kent at June 9, 2009 3:12 AM
Hi Iain. Looks like the quicks are really coming for a pasting in this series. Even a fresh quick from the IPL like Nannes went for a few. I think that everyone associates T20 par scores with the first IPL where the pitches were flat. Now that we have seen some T20's in South Africa and England the spinners are really starting to look like the key. Restricting runs is the order of the day. Taking wickets does slow scoring but with ten wickets and only twenty overs it is the strike rate that needs addressing. Most captains will still hit the opposition with six overs of pace so the change of pace has an impact but I still thin introducing slower bowlers earlier is a good idea. Sachin used his bowlers in one over spells which is somehing else worth considering. Great to see you guys brush aside Scotland and your game aginst South Africa is, in my view, a possible preview to the final. No doubt you get a lot of advise from your team mates just don't let it crowd your mind. Good luck
Posted by: Ady at June 9, 2009 4:53 AM
GO kiwiz!! .... beat the proteas! ....
incidentally, this is the 1st comment ;)
Posted by: brk at June 9, 2009 6:21 AM
Hi,
Welcome back. I loved your blogging during the Indo-NZ matches. Keeping up the good work.
Nice article. Keep it up in the blogosphere and bowl better the next time. The South Africans will eat you for breakfast if you bowl the way you did in the last match.
Best wishes from India
Posted by: Dyldog at June 9, 2009 9:49 AM
Good stuff Iain, good luck for the rest of the tournament. We're all behind ya... well I am :-D
Posted by: srivenu paturi at June 9, 2009 10:26 AM
hello, OBrien.... u must be reading my comment cuz I'm the first one to write.. I suppose, as I see no comments right now. Anyway all the best for ur prep against SA. Trash them they cuz they compete hard against us - The Indians ;) Gud luck...!
Posted by: David O'Schnackenhebra at June 9, 2009 10:39 AM
Iain - great to see such a candid assessment of your, and the teams performance against the Scots. I thought the length was poor for most of the innings. I'll be there to support you on Saturday dressed up like as half horse, half zebra. Go kiwis!
Posted by: ab at June 9, 2009 12:32 PM
interesting blog as ever.
why not 'death bowling' from the start? In local club cricket I once came up against a team of tall South Africans who KEPT bowling very full/yorker length from the start even in a 40 over game. Very frustrating as a batsman and after about the fifth leg glance I inside edged on to my pad and then the stumps!
if 'death bowling' works in the last five overs, why not the first fifteen?
Posted by: ab at June 9, 2009 12:32 PM
interesting blog as ever.
why not 'death bowling' from the start? In local club cricket I once came up against a team of tall South Africans who KEPT bowling very full/yorker length from the start even in a 40 over game. Very frustrating as a batsman and after about the fifth leg glance I inside edged on to my pad and then the stumps!
if 'death bowling' works in the last five overs, why not the first fifteen?
Posted by: Auchi, Sri Lanka at June 9, 2009 12:45 PM
Hope you get to play in today's match, good luck and play well!
Posted by: Aamir Akhund at June 12, 2009 9:49 AM
Ian. how many times have i written on your blog only that these indian player are nothing but half decent cricketer who have become what they are only because of the amazing media power they have.
Each and every time one plays against the baby blues one must remember to just do the basic right and the indian babies whould fall like a pack of cheap cards
Post your comment
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.