Marsh and Warner take Australia to T20 World Cup glory
Australia won the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2021 as Mitchell
Marsh and David Warner hit half-centuries to chase down 173 with ease at the
Dubai International Stadium.
Marsh and Warner’s brilliant knocks came after New Zealand
captain Kane Williamson had responded to losing the toss with a classy innings
of his own, with his 85 off 45 helping the Black Caps to 172/4.
But Australia started the chase well and rarely took their
foot off the gas as they raced to the World Cup title with eight wickets and
seven balls to spare, sparking jubilant celebrations in the UAE.
Australia had lost skipper Aaron Finch early when he
top-edged Trent Boult to Daryl Mitchell in the deep.
But the in-form David Warner got off to a decent start,
while it was Marsh who upped the rate most spectacularly early on, smashing 14
runs off the first three deliveries he faced.
With Warner and Marsh still at the crease, Australia reached
43/1 at the end of the Powerplay.
And the pair went through the gears as the spinners came on,
adding 39 runs in the following four overs to leave them needing 91 from 60 to
win the T20 World Cup at the halfway stage of the reply.
It was said before the match by New Zealand skipper
Williamson that the final would come down to individual contributions, and so
it proved, with two of Australia’s top four delivering on the biggest stage in
the run-chase
First it was the irrepressible Warner who smoked Jimmy
Neesham for six in the 11th over to reach his half-century off just 34 balls.
Boult was brought back to try and break the partnership as
it edged towards a century-stand, and the left-armer did the trick, bowling
Warner for 53.
But Marsh ensured the pace of the innings didn’t slip after
Warner’s departure, providing a defining contribution of his own.
Marsh reached his half-century three deliveries quicker than
his team-mate to set a new record for the fastest 50 in a T20 World Cup final,
and finished on 77 from 50.
And it fell to Glenn Maxwell to see it over the line for
Australia, as he reverse-swept Tim Southee for four to prompt a stream of
yellow-shirted teammates to flood onto the pitch and join in the huge
celebrations.
Earlier, Martin Guptill and Daryl Mitchell had got the Black
Caps off to an initial flier. Starc struggled to find swing with the new ball
in the opening over with Guptill crunching a cut away for four off the second
delivery to set up a nine-run opening over.
And an eventful third over, the first for Glenn Maxwell, saw Mitchell smoke the all-rounder for a six off the first ball before Matthew Wade failed to cling on to an under-edge from Guptill to give the Black Caps opener an early let-off.
But the Australians didn’t have to wait too much longer for
their first wicket as Hazlewood found Mitchell’s outside edge for 11.
And Hazlewood’s relentless line and length brought the
Powerplay back under control for Australia as the Kiwis reached 32/1 after six.
The Kiwis found their flow immediately after the drinks
break, with Mitchel Starc going for 19 in the 11th over as Hazlewood’s fine
evening taking a turn when he failed to take a catch in the deep to dismiss
Williamson. (ICC)
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