Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

Australia face tricky task against resurgent New Zealand

October 04, 2009 16:06 IST

Chasing a second successive title, Australia face a tricky task against a resurgent rivals New Zealand in the Champions Trophy final in Centurion on Monday.

Ricky PontingRicky Ponting's men have been in red-hot form and they have not lost a single match in the eight-nation ICC event.

A rejuvenated New Zealand, however, will not let a rare chance of an ICC event triumph go by so easily as they finally broke the semi-final jinx having made it to the final of the Champions Trophy for the second time.

Though without a major ICC event triumph, except for the 2000-01 edition of the Champions Trophy, New Zealand have always been tough opponents.

The Australians have been in fine form with the bat with skipper Ricky Ponting leading the chart of most prolific batsman in Champions Trophy with 287 runs at an average of nearly 96.

And Shane Watson's return to form at the top order with a blistering unbeaten 136 against England in the first semi-final will only add to the concerns of Kiwis.

The timely return to form of Michael Hussey has also filled the void left by vice-captain Michael Clarke's absence in the middle-order.

Australia's quick bowling department comprising Peter Siddle, Brett Lee, Watson and Mitchell Johnson has been among wickets too.

The good form of the pacers has also compensated the few concerns Ponting had in the slow-bowling department with only off-spinner Nathan Hauritz in his armour.

Ponting has already made his intentions clear and said his side will raise their game when it matters the most.

"We are playing at a level which would win us the big games. We look to play best cricket when it matters. We are peaking at the right time for the finals," Ponting said.

New Zealand, on the other hand, have often been the underdogs in major tournaments, having faltered eight times in the semi-finals of 50-over ICC events.

The Black Caps mainly consists of bits-and-pieces players, mainly all-rounders, who have the capability to turn a match on any day, as was witnessed in Grant Elliot's 75-run knock against Pakistan.

Skipper Daniel Vettori is determined to see that his side does not lose a chance to win a major tournament.

"There is a real ambition in the side. There's belief and desire to win tournament instead of just ending up as semi-finalists," he said.

But with a flat track on offer at Centurion, Vettori will bank on wicket-keeper batsman Brendon McCullum, Martin Guptill and Ross Taylor to give them a good start.

Although Vettori has been multi-tasking with both bat and the ball, the Black Caps cannot afford to leave it to him all the time.

On the bowling front, with support from Kyle Mills and James Franklin at the other end, Shane Bond too is slowly and steadily coming back to his usual hot form sending down fast stuffs.

The charge of middle overs, meanwhile, rests with Vettori, who along with Ian Butler and Elliot, have done a decent job so far in the tournament.

Teams

Australia: Ricky Ponting (Capt), David Hussey, Callum Ferguson, Nathan Hauritz, Ben Hilfenhaus, James Hopes, Michael Hussey, Mitchell Johnson, Brett Lee, Tim Paine, Peter Siddle, Adam Voges, Shane Watson, Cameron White, Brad Haddin, Doug Bollinger.

New Zealand: Daniel Vettori (Capt), Shane Bond, Neil Broom, Ian Butler, Brendon Diamanti, Grant Elliott, Martin Guptill, Gareth Hopkins, Brendon McCullum, Kyle Mills, James Franklin, Jeetan Patel, Aaron Raymond, Ross Taylor, Daryl Tuffey.

© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.