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Cool Dravid, crafty Kaif see India home, give SL a life
Friday, March 14 2003 21:02 Hrs (IST)
Centurion: India threw Asian neighbours Sri Lanka a World Cup lifeline when it
knocked out New Zealand with a seven-wicket romp at SuperSport Park on Friday.
Left-arm seamer Zaheer Khan took four for 42, including two wickets off consecutive
balls in the first over, as India shot out New Zealand for 146 after electing to
field in the its Super Sixes match.
India was it self reduced to 21 for three in reply before Mohammed Kaif steered his
team to victory with an unbeaten 68 following a fourth-wicket stand of 129 with vice-
captain Rahul Dravid (53 not out).
New Zealand, which needed a win to join defending champions Australia, India and
Kenya in the semi-finals, will take an early flight home unless Zimbabwe upset Sri
Lanka in East London on Saturday.
A Sri Lankan victory, however, will see Sanath Jayasuriya's men squeeze through to
the semi-finals against all odds after losing to Australia and India earlier in the
Super Sixes.
India's eighth win in nine matches at the World Cup made them clear favourites to
defeat surprise qualifiers Kenya in the second semi-final under the Kingsmead lights
at Durban next Thursday.
Australia, meanwhile, must wait till Saturday evening to know its opponents in the
first semi-final at Port Elizabeth on Tuesday.
Faced with a must-win situation, the Kiwi bowlers responded to their meagre total in
sensational style. Fiery pace bowler Shane Bond had Virender Sehwag caught superbly
in the slips by Scott Styris in his first over and then clean bowled captain Saurav
Ganguly in the second.
Daryl Tuffey, taking the field for only the second time in a month, struck a major
blow when star batsman Sachin Tendulkar was caught at point for 15 after taking
three successive boundaries earlier in the over.
But as the Indians cruised to victory, the Kiwis were left to rue two missed
opportunities. Wicket-keeper Brendon McCullum let slip an edge off Dravid's bat
before the batsman had scored, a regulation catch that should have made it 22 for
four. Then the usually safe Chris Harris dropped Kaif on six.
As tension mounted on the field, English umpire Peter Willey tried to cool tempers
by putting a tape across bowler Craig McMillan's mouth after he had engaged Kaif in
a verbal duel.
Earlier, Zaheer equalled his One-day best of four for 42 against Zimbabwe at Sharjah
two years ago on his way to surpassing the 100-wicket mark in the Limited Overs game.
The left-armer, who removed Craig McMillan and Nathan Astle in his first over, was
unlucky not to post career-best figures as umpire Daryl Harper turned down a close
appeal for leg before against Daniel Vettori.
Zaheer was also restricted to eight overs with Ganguly employing part-timers
Tendulkar, Sehwag, Dinesh Mongia and himself to share the 10 overs of the fifth
bowler.
That allowed the Kiwi tail to boost the score as Jacob Oram made 23, Vettori 13 and
Tuffey 11. New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming was the top scorer with 30 in good
batting conditions.
Copyright AFP 2001
Extras:
Scorecard
Zaheer joins the party, rips the Kiwis apart
Zaheer quickest Indian to claim 100 wickets
King Khan derails Kiwi's Cup dream
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