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New Zealand beat England by seven wickets in third women’s ODI – as it happened

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Sun 7 Apr 2024 01.18 EDTFirst published on Sat 6 Apr 2024 18.43 EDT
New Zealand’s Sophie Devine (centre) celebrates with teammates after her century helped her team to victory.
New Zealand’s Sophie Devine (centre) celebrates with teammates after her century helped her team to victory. Photograph: Michael Bradley/Getty Images
New Zealand’s Sophie Devine (centre) celebrates with teammates after her century helped her team to victory. Photograph: Michael Bradley/Getty Images

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Geoff Lemon
Geoff Lemon

That’s it for England’s tour of New Zealand. Devine signs it off with her eighth ODI century, and moves past Mignon du Preez into 14th place all time for runs in women’s one-day international cricket. She has 3776 runs so far.

But 20-over cricket will be the focus for most of this year, with a women’s T20 World Cup in Bangladesh starting in September.

And that’s it from us. See you anon.

England skipper Heather Knight: “Today is a bit frustrating, but we haven’t been our best to be honest through the ODI series. Probably we struggled with tempo as a batting group, we only batted in five (one-day matches) last year. It’s a good workout for us as a group, getting used to that tempo, and when you’re on a pitch that’s a little bit tricky. Overall, really pleased with how the tour has gone.”

Amy Jones wins the player of the series gong. Did the job with the bat when England were in trouble more than once, which hasn’t always worked for her in the past. With the gloves though, missed those final two chances to keep pressure on NZ today.

NZ captain and player of the match Sophie Devine is speaking.

“Really clinical job by the group. It was set up by the bowlers, fantastic effort to keep them under 200, and then to chase it down with wickets in hand and overs to spare shows that we’re on the right path.

“We knew we were going to have to attack this England side, they’ve played very good cricket throughout. The pitch was a tricky one at times, and you can’t set the field if the bowlers can’t execute, and they were excellent today.”

New Zealand win by seven wickets with 11 overs to spare

England win the ODI series 2-1 after claiming the T20s 4-1, but New Zealand get the result today. Every win matters for ranking points and World Cup qualification at some point. That was a thorough win.

Century! Sophie Devine 100 from 93 balls

39th over: New Zealand 195-3 (Devine 100, Green 38) She goes all the way! Six to win, and Devine comes down to the final ball of the over and launches it into the midwicket outer. It’s Charlie Dean the unfortunate bowler once again, the second time in this innings that Devine has bashed two sixes in one over from Dean. What a way to finish.

38th over: New Zealand 182-3 (Devine 88, Green 37) Filer is back, again bowling short and wide to the cut shot, and like her teammates before her Maddy Green puts it away. Four. Goes to the pull when the line straightens, only for one, but Devine is able to muscle one much further in front of square for four, through midwicket. That feels good, so she lumps a drive over mid off for more bikkies. Tries again, Filer missing the yorker by the length of a pencil, but saving the shot as it scorches past her, getting hands there to deflect it to mid off. No run there, but Devine won’t be denied from the last ball of that over, smashing it through mid on! They get 17 from the over. Devine is 12 from a century with 13 needed to win.

37th over: New Zealand 165-3 (Devine 76, Green 32) Staying confident, Green. Right after that missed stumping she still comes down the track to hit the ball. In this over from Dean, she reaches wide of off stump to sweep two. Then Dean bowls five wides down the leg side. Her six overs now have cost 50 runs.

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36th over: New Zealand 155-3 (Devine 75, Green 28) Ecclestone to bowl, and that’s a missed stumping! That’s just an error from Jones. Straightforward chance. Green is way down the pitch. There’s sharp bounce from Ecclestone well above the bails, so Jones does have to get gloves up, but the line is right at her and she should take that. Instead it fumbles out of her gloves and Green gets back for her second reprieve from the keeper.

35th over: New Zealand 152-3 (Devine 74, Green 26) Dean will keep bowling, interesting. She almost gets her head taken off by an errant bounce from what has been at times an erratic centre square, as the ball is returned to her. Dean does manage to slow the NZ roll against her though, three dots and a leg-side nudge for one while bowling to Green. Devine doesn’t do her any more damage from the final two balls.

34th over: New Zealand 151-3 (Devine 74, Green 25) Good shot from Green, lofted off drive from Ecclestone for four. Hitting big down the ground is Green’s strength.

33rd over: New Zealand 146-3 (Devine 74, Green 20) Charlie Dean is having a horror, going at 11 an over in her fourth. Devine tries to glide and instead edges past the keeper for four. Later hurries a single. Nearly has Green caught though! Glove to forearm, trying to reverse sweep, and the ball lobs behind the batter away to the off side. The keeper could have taken that easily had she not been wrongfooted, and she can’t get her balance going the right way quickly enough.

32nd over: New Zealand 140-3 (Devine 69, Green 19) Last roll of the dice for Heather Knight, bringing back her best bowler Ecclestone. Still got 59 to defend. Devine does get an edge back into her pad, and Green does nearly chip to mid on but Cross doesn’t judge the flight and the ball carries her position and lands for two runs.

31st over: New Zealand 136-3 (Devine 68, Green 16) Solidly struck pull shot by Green facing Cross, that’s encouraging. Only gets her one run but it was middled. It’s the only run from the first five balls, but the good over comes undone at the end as Devine drives stylishly through mid on. Bouchier might have stopped it with a dive but wasn’t in the right position with her feet to do so. She chases to the boundary but loses.

30th over: New Zealand 131-3 (Devine 64, Green 15) Lauren Filer returns, but nothing dramatic happens. No wides, no bouncers, just a few singles off the pads.

29th over: New Zealand 127-3 (Devine 62, Green 14) Green finds an option from Cross, backing away to again run the ball off the face for one. Got to be able to turn over strike against the bowlers you don’t fancy.

28th over: New Zealand 124-3 (Devine 60, Green 13) That’s much better from Green, she’s happier facing Sciver-Brunt. Eases two behind point, then cuts four runs with very little follow-through. Lovely timing. Front foot for the next ball, and drives three more through cover! Much better. She can be a destructive player. Throw in a wide and a couple of Devine singles, and that’s a dozen off the over.

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27th over: New Zealand 112-3 (Devine 58, Green 4) This is Maddy Green being defensive, blocking Cross from the crease. Three balls, four, five, the whole over. Right in her shell again. That’s poor batting from a middle-order player.

83 more to win for New Zealand at just past half the overs. They should do this but get Devine out and there’s a vulnerable batting order to follow.

26th over: New Zealand 112-3 (Devine 58, Green 4) In fact it’s the full opening combo, Sciver-Brunt joining Cross with the ball. Devine turns over strike, Green glides two past the keeper, then one to midwicket.

25th over: New Zealand 108-3 (Devine 57, Green 1) Ecclestone off, unsurprisingly. No sense risking her. Cross is back. Green gets going with a glide to deep third.

Half century! Devine 52 from 55 balls

24th over: New Zealand 106-3 (Devine 56, Green 0) Blammo goes Devine! Smacks the ball straight back over Dean’s head for four. Dean bowls the next one slow and very wide, it would have been called wide but Devine chases it and manages to get a piece, through cover for four more!

Dot ball, then Dean changes up, spearing the ball in at leg stump with a flat arc, but she can’t get it full enough. Devine goes back and swats one of those behind square for four, then does it again! Four boundaries in five balls.

23rd over: New Zealand 90-3 (Devine 40, Green 0) Here’s a chance for Maddy Green then, who over her last two games has produced two really poor innings. Totally becalmed, hasn’t been able to score.

WICKET! Kerr lbw Ecclestone 31, NZ 90-3

What an extraordinary five balls! Ecclestone hurts herself first ball of the over. Innocuous moment, she just bowls and immediately pulls up sore, lifting her front foot from the ground gingerly before ending up on her haunches. The doctor and physio come out and she gets a rub of the calf, then decides to bowl on. Sends down a short one that Kerr cuts for two, then dismisses the set batter! Kerr right back on her stumps, tries to work to leg and misses, and her guilt is made immutable by the fact that the ball lodges between her two pads, right in front of middle stump. It’s like a real-life freeze frame for the umpire, easy.

Impact a touch high but probably taking the bails. They don’t review.

22nd over: New Zealand 87-2 (Kerr 29, Devine 39) Now Devine puts one out of the ground! It’s not a bad ball from Dean either, Devine just pre-empts it and is so far down the pitch that it becomes an easy half-volley. That one goes over midwicket, and two balls later the next goes over long on. One of the ground staff runs off the tractor to take the catch and throw it back. Two massive blows to wake up the crowd.

21st over: New Zealand 73-2 (Kerr 28, Devine 26) Another scoreless over from Ecclestone, though Devine isn’t entirely defensive – at one stage she tries to cut off her stumps after backing away, and the ball bounces over the bails.

20th over: New Zealand 73-2 (Kerr 28, Devine 26) Charlie Dean on with her off spin, and the batters knock a couple of singles. Devine then gets a high full toss that she should be putting onto the hill at the Tron, but somehow she only drags to the boundary rider behind square.

19th over: New Zealand 70-2 (Kerr 27, Devine 24) Ecclestone into her fifth. England need wickets. The partnership passed 50 in that previous over. Ecclestone bowls six dot balls. NZ need 125 from 31 overs.

18th over: New Zealand 70-2 (Kerr 27, Devine 24) Filer bounces Kerr, but Kerr plays the hook shot calmly, two runs to long leg, then lays into a cut shot to another short ball and gets four behind point. Top shot there. Drops and runs a single. Sharing the goodies around, Filer gives Devine the same poor ball that Kerr received, and Devine mimics her teammate, cutting four behind point. Throw in another leg-side wide, and Filer is battling – she’s the fastest but she’s gone for 27 from four overs, nearly seven an over, where everyone else has gone for twos or threes.

17th over: New Zealand 58-2 (Kerr 20, Devine 20) Ecclestone with loop, drawing a miscue towards mid off in the air. Devine survives though and hustles two runs to square leg. Ecclestone drops short, grunting in annoyance through the stump mic, but Devine is also annoyed at not getting four runs, Wyatt again diving behind point to keep her to one.

16th over: New Zealand 54-2 (Kerr 19, Devine 17) Filer down the leg side again, her third wide, this one a short ball. But goes short outside off stump to follow and Devine is dropped. Goes kitchen-sinkwards with her cut shot, big top edge that goes over Heather Knight’s head at slip. Knight gets both hands up but the ball bursts through. Devine looks at her partner, shrugs and smiles cheekily. Gets one run for it, Kerr turns another, then Devine throws her hands through a square drive for two aerial runs. Filer bowls her fourth wide, this one down leg. Drinks.

15th over: New Zealand 47-2 (Kerr 18, Devine 13) Called through for a sharp one, Devine says yes at the non-striker’s end and Kerr is slow to realise, might have been gone had the throw hit. That gets Devine on strike, only for Ecclestone to waste a review with a ball that’s not straightening enough from left-arm around the wicket to take the stumps. Green light on leg stump, going down. They got a leg bye on that to.

14th over: New Zealand 45-2 (Kerr 17, Devine 13) Hard to time shots on the pitch. Devine tries to clobber on the up through cover but misses. Kerr gets real short width from Filer though, and cuts with precision behind point for four. That was a quality shot.

13th over: New Zealand 38-2 (Kerr 12, Devine 12) One run from Ecclestone’s over, as Devine drives down the ground. Other than that, there’s no way through the field.

12th over: New Zealand 37-2 (Kerr 12, Devine 11) Time for speed. Lauren Filer the bowler, played a couple of the T20s on this tour among her handful of England games. Interesting that they keep the speedster for after the fielding restrictions loosen while trusting Sciver-Brunt to keep things tidy up front. Not top pace yet but around 115 kph. Kerr does swish and miss at a couple. Single and a leg bye from the over, Jones diving to save well after the ball flicks the back of Devine’s pad.

11th over: New Zealand 35-2 (Kerr 11, Devine 11) Sophie Ecclestone on to bowl now that the fielding restrictions have lifted. Devine immediately hits the left-arm spinner back over her head for four. Eccles turns one big past the bat as if to remind Devine that she can.

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10th over: New Zealand 31-2 (Kerr 11, Devine 6) Top shot from Kerr! Crouches and cover drives, through extra, splitting the field to take four from Sciver-Brunt. The only score from the over. 164 more to win.

9th over: New Zealand 26-2 (Kerr 7, Devine 6) Shot from Kerr, skipping down at Cross and driving through wide long on for four. Late cut for a single, then England volunteer another run for Devine, who pushes to the cover fielder – this time its Charlie Dean giving the overthrow. A pointless shot at the stumps, as hard as she can, though the batter is easily back in her ground, and it reaches keeper Jones as it hits the turf so the keeper can’t stop it.

8th over: New Zealand 20-2 (Kerr 2, Devine 5) Gee, Devine nearly goes in similar fashion to Bates – aims leg side against Sciver-Brunt in the same way, though her edged shot though flies towards deep third instead. It lands in front of the fielder. One run, and a leg bye from Kerr’s pad.

7th over: New Zealand 18-2 (Kerr 2, Devine 4) So it’s been another slow start for NZ, even leaving aside the wickets fallen. They don’t need a fast rate overall but eating up overs doesn’t help those coming in next. Devine steals two runs by drawing a throw at the stumps while floating out of her ground, then hustling on the ricochet. It was Wyatt’s throw from backward point, but Wyatt gets back three runs for her team with a diving stop from a middle cut shot. Devine just runs the one.

6th over: New Zealand 15-2 (Kerr 2, Devine 1) Most of the time for New Zealand in recent years the scoring of runs has been either Bates, Devine, or bust. Sophie Devine has the job ahead of her now, and gets going right away with a drive past the bowler for one.

WICKET! Bates c Bouchier b Sciver-Brunt 6, NZ 14-2

Oh, dear. Bates will be annoyed with that one. Looks to go leg-side again after the previous over, but doesn’t time her shot. An unflattering leading edge limps into the air and down towards mid on. Simple catch.

5th over: New Zealand 14-1 (Bates 6, Kerr 2) Elegant from Bates, who whips Cross off her pads through midwicket for four. Picks off another single from a leg glance.

4th over: New Zealand 9-1 (Bates 1, Kerr 2) Suzie Bates finally gets her first run, chopped to deep third. Sciver-Brunt strikes Kerr on the pad but it’s angling down. Inside edge to square leg from the next ball, but the fielder is in the right spot to prevent the run. So Kerr advances and cuts her first two runs well behind point. A very wide ball down the leg side adds an extra.

WICKET! Plimmer c Jones b Cross 4, NZ 5-1

3rd over: New Zealand 5-1 (Bates 0) There’s some movement for Cross, away from the bat and beating Plimmer! Doesn’t miss off stump by much. Plimmer walks at the next ball to disrupt the bowler, slicing two runs behind point. Cross follows with a yorker that is defended, but last ball of the over Plimmer makes an error – feet rooted, sees some width and is drawn into a push at it, the length isn’t there to drive, and she edges behind.

2nd over: New Zealand 3-0 (Plimmer 2, Bates 0) Nat Sciver-Brunt with her very medium mediums will get the new ball, which is interesting – she’s been mostly bowling first change for a long time. Ties down Bates for a full over, including striking the batter a stinger on the inner thigh.

1st over: New Zealand 3-0 (Plimmer 2, Bates 0) A circumspect start for NZ against Kate Cross, who doesn’t find much swing but is mostly tight on the stumps. Bates gets a leg bye, Plimmer cuts the one looser ball for two runs but defends the rest.

Geoff Lemon
Geoff Lemon

Thanks Megan. Ticking our way through the innings break awaiting the chase. This game feels pretty familiar – England’s batting has been unconvincing through much of this tour, and New Zealand have been able to compete in the field, but their own batting has been substantially poorer than England’s. They have a chance here with a low total but England should strongly fancy defending it.

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Megan Maurice
Megan Maurice

Well I’m just about ready to hand over to my wonderful colleague Geoff Lemon, who will see you through New Zealand’s batting innings. You’ll be in very safe hands there! It’s been a fascinating battle so far, but I have a feeling the twists and turns aren’t over just yet and this game has some more in store for us yet. New Zealand has some very experienced and skilled batters, but they haven’t played to their potential so far this series. Brooke Halliday and Izzy Gaze were the pick of the batters last match, while Suzie Bates has been relatively consistent. The key will be to not panic if they lose a couple of wickets early and trust themselves to get back into the match. I’ll leave you now in Geoff’s hands – enjoy the rest of the match!

England all out for 194

Well, what an interesting innings! Plenty of ups and downs for both teams – England had some strong partnerships – Knight and Sciver-Brunt and then Dean and Jones – but New Zealand found a way to keep fighting their way back into the game and taking wickets. New Zealand were all out for 196 in the last game and 207 in the game before, so they have the runs in them, but only just. England will be disappointed in their batting, but will feel that their bowling can get them over the line here if they do everything right. It’s certainly game on in Hamilton!

WICKET! Ecclestone c Green b J Kerr (England 194)

Turns out Jess Kerr had another over left, so I pre-empted that ‘all spin from here’ thing and Kerr wanted to really make me pay for forgetting that she had an over left by taking a wicket. It’s a good length ball that Ecclestone goes after slogging, but it’s straight up in the air and Green catches it easily at long on.

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