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ODI no. 2577
ICC World Cup - 47th Match, Super Eights
Australia v New Zealand
2006/07 season

Played at National Cricket Stadium, St George's, Grenada (neutral venue), on 20 April 2007 (50-over match)

Result Australia won by 215 runs

 Australia innings (50 overs maximum) R M B 4s 6s SR
wicket-keeper AC Gilchrist c Gillespie b Franklin 1 7 2 0 0 50.00
ML Hayden c & b Styris 103 150 100 10 2 103.00
captain RT Ponting c Taylor b Patel 66 96 70 7 0 94.28
MJ Clarke b Franklin 49 59 46 7 0 106.52
MEK Hussey c Styris b Franklin 37 75 44 2 0 84.09
A Symonds c Mason b Patel 11 20 16 1 0 68.75
SR Watson not out 65 44 32 4 4 203.12
GB Hogg not out 0 3 0 0 0 -
    Extras (lb 1, w 5, nb 10) 16
    Total (6 wickets; 50 overs; 230 mins) 348

Did not bat NW Bracken, SW Tait, GD McGrath

Fall of wickets1-7 (Gilchrist, 1.1 ov), 2-144 (Ponting, 22.6 ov), 3-216 (Hayden, 32.4 ov), 4-233 (Clarke, 35.3 ov), 5-257 (Symonds, 40.1 ov), 6-334 (Hussey, 49.3 ov)

 Bowling O M R W Econ
 MJ Mason 3 0 27 0 9.00 (1nb, 1w)
 JEC Franklin 8 0 74 3 9.25 (5nb, 1w)
 JS Patel 10 0 48 2 4.80 (1nb)
 DL Vettori 10 0 60 0 6.00 (2nb)
 SB Styris 10 0 50 1 5.00 (2w)
 MR Gillespie 6 0 67 0 11.16 (1nb)
 CD McMillan 3 0 21 0 7.00

 New Zealand innings (target: 349 runs from 50 overs) R M B 4s 6s SR
PG Fulton b Hogg 62 127 72 5 0 86.11
captain SP Fleming c Ponting b Tait 12 18 9 1 1 133.33
RL Taylor c Hussey b McGrath 3 8 6 0 0 50.00
SB Styris c Hayden b McGrath 27 30 22 5 0 122.72
CD McMillan lbw b Tait 1 6 5 0 0 20.00
JEC Franklin b Watson 6 11 9 0 0 66.66
wicket-keeper BB McCullum c Hussey b Hogg 7 19 16 0 0 43.75
DL Vettori c Symonds b Hogg 4 7 4 1 0 100.00
MR Gillespie c McGrath b Hogg 2 9 8 0 0 25.00
MJ Mason c wicket-keeperGilchrist b Tait 0 6 5 0 0 0.00
JS Patel not out 0 3 1 0 0 0.00
    Extras (w 7, nb 2) 9
    Total (all out; 25.5 overs; 127 mins) 133

Fall of wickets1-21 (Fleming, 3.3 ov), 2-29 (Taylor, 5.1 ov), 3-77 (Styris, 11.1 ov), 4-80 (McMillan, 12.3 ov), 5-89 (Franklin, 14.3 ov), 6-111 (McCullum, 19.3 ov), 7-117 (Vettori, 21.1 ov), 8-127 (Gillespie, 23.5 ov), 9-133 (Mason, 24.5 ov), 10-133 (Fulton, 25.5 ov)

 Bowling O M R W Econ
 NW Bracken 4 0 27 0 6.75 (1w)
 SW Tait 6 0 32 3 5.33 (1nb, 4w)
 GD McGrath 4 0 25 2 6.25 (1nb)
 GB Hogg 6.5 1 29 4 4.24 (1w)
 SR Watson 5 0 20 1 4.00 (1w)

Toss Australia, who chose to bat first
Points Australia 2, New Zealand 0

Player of the match ML Hayden (Australia)

Umpires Aleem Dar (Pakistan) and Asad Rauf (Pakistan)
TV umpire BR Doctrove
Match referee MJ Procter (South Africa)
Reserve umpire DJ Harper (Australia)

 Match notes

  • Australia innings
  • Australia: 50 runs in 7.3 overs (47 balls), Extras 2
  • 2nd Wicket: 50 runs in 42 balls (ML Hayden 22, RT Ponting 24, Ex 4)
  • Australia: 100 runs in 15.1 overs (98 balls), Extras 7
  • Drinks: Australia - 102/1 in 16.0 overs (ML Hayden 47, RT Ponting 47)
  • 2nd Wicket: 100 runs in 100 balls (ML Hayden 43, RT Ponting 48, Ex 9)
  • ML Hayden: 50 off 53 balls (5 x 4, 1 x 6)
  • RT Ponting: 50 off 53 balls (7 x 4)
  • Power Play 2: Overs 23.1 - 28.0
  • Australia: 150 runs in 23.4 overs (150 balls), Extras 9
  • 3rd Wicket: 50 runs in 35 balls (ML Hayden 28, MJ Clarke 23, Ex 0)
  • Australia: 200 runs in 29.4 overs (187 balls), Extras 10
  • ML Hayden: 100 off 96 balls (10 x 4, 2 x 6)
  • Drinks: Australia - 208/2 in 31.0 overs (ML Hayden 100, MJ Clarke 30)
  • Power Play 3: Overs 33.1 - 38.0
  • Australia: 250 runs in 38.4 overs (244 balls), Extras 13
  • Australia: 300 runs in 47.2 overs (298 balls), Extras 16
  • 6th Wicket: 50 runs in 46 balls (MEK Hussey 21, SR Watson 26, Ex 3)
  • SR Watson: 50 off 28 balls (4 x 4, 2 x 6)
  • New Zealand innings
  • New Zealand: 50 runs in 7.3 overs (48 balls), Extras 3
  • Power Play 2: Overs 10.1 - 15.0
  • Drinks: New Zealand - 80/4 in 12.3 overs (PG Fulton 32)
  • New Zealand: 100 runs in 16.3 overs (106 balls), Extras 7
  • PG Fulton: 50 off 54 balls (3 x 4)
  • Official Attendance - 12,249

    Hayden inspires Australia to mammoth win


    The Bulletin by Siddhartha Vaidyanathan, assistant editor of Cricinfo
    April 20, 2007

    Australia 348 for 6 (Hayden 103, Ponting 66, Watson 65*) beat New Zealand 133 (Fulton 62, Hogg 4-29) by 215 runs

    Matthew Hayden's third hundred of the competition, the hundredth case of a century in World Cups, was at the heart of a power-packed Australian batting performance during a thumping 215-run triumph against New Zealand in Grenada. Australia, clearly the best team in the tournament, are now two steps away from claiming a hat-trick of World Cups and will travel to St Lucia to take on South Africa in the second semi-final on Wednesday.

    It was a dominant, almost vengeful, Australian effort, one which would have helped erase the painful memories of the 3-0 whitewash in the recent Chappell-Hadlee series. Hayden shone the brightest but Ricky Ponting and Shane Watson chipped in with valuable fifties - the first a bustling knock at the top, the second a blitzer at the end. New Zealand were without Shane Bond and Jacob Oram, who were out with injury and illness, but this turned into a nightmare of sorts, ending in their worst defeat in one-day history.

    Chasing 349 would have required a special effort, yet it's a challenge one wouldn't have put beyond this New Zealand side after their record-breaking feats in recent times. Peter Fulton cracked an impressive, risk-free half-century but the rest caved in against a well-oiled attack. The two new-ball bowlers, Glenn McGrath and Shaun Tait, broke the back of the New Zealand line-up with a couple of wickets apiece before Brad Hogg, with 4 for 29, polished off the lower order with customary efficiency.

    Fulton was the last man to fall, bowled around the legs by Hogg, and he overshadowed his colleagues with his confident strokeplay. The rest couldn't handle the pressure of the mounting rate and collapsed without much of a fight. Tait was lucky with the first breakthrough, when Stephen Fleming was adjudged caught at slip despite the short ball striking his arm, but his speedy straight ball to Craig McMillan was a sucker-punch, pinning the batsman on the back foot and rapping him on the pads.

    McGrath struck off his first ball, banging one short and clipping Ross Taylor's edge, before inducing a false stroke off the aggressive Scott Styris. Hogg usually thrives against the lower order and he mopped up four wickets in quick time. The rapidity of the end reinforced the gulf between the two sides today.

    Hayden's last appearance against New Zealand, at Hamilton, had yielded a mighty 181 and he carried on in the same vein, equalling the record of Mark Waugh and Sourav Ganguly by scoring his third hundred of the tournament. It took just four deliveries for him to walk down the track and smash the opening bowler Michael Mason through the line. James Franklin, who had dismissed Adam Gilchrist off his first ball, also felt the brunt of Hayden's blade, being cut savagely through point. Hayden even cracked Asad Rauf, one of the umpires, with a ferocious straight blow in an over where he and Ponting clattered 18 off Franklin.

    Ponting, walking in at the fall of an early wicket, was away with a slapped four off his first ball and lapped up the short deliveries with glee. It's a mystery why teams continue to bowl short to Ponting early in his innings, especially given his mastery of the pull shot. Fleming juggled his bowling resources around but neither Mark Gillespie nor Mason made any sort of impression, especially with Hayden and Ponting not afraid to take the aerial route. Both brought up their half-centuries in 53 deliveries, pacing their innings efficiently, and set the stage for a massive total.

    New Zealand resorted to spin as early as the fifth over, bringing on Jeetan Patel. Daniel Vettori, who was playing his 200th ODI, came on in the tenth over and it was his spell of 0 for 13 in four overs which allowed New Zealand to exert some sort of control.

    Patel returned for two more effective stints, ones where he fearlessly flighted the ball in the face of an aggressive line-up, and conjured up some loop to trouble the best. Hayden powered along to his century, utilising the Powerplays by backing away and hammering Vettori for three successive fours in the 28th over. He brought up the landmark with a forceful drive to long-on and celebrated with the exuberance of a teenager.

    Clarke and Hussey provided good support but it was Watson who bulldozed Australia close to 350. He put the medium-pacers off by sweeping them cheekily before whistling them down the ground with a clean swing of the bat. The short straight boundaries proved to be too tempting an invitation and Watson scorched four fours and as many sixes in his 32-ball stay.

    He ended the innings with a flourish, whacking Franklin for a six down the ground and another over cover, as New Zealand were challenged to complete their most successful chase in ODI history. They didn't get remotely close.