Santner & McConchie's Epic 84-Run Stand Lifts NZ to 168 vs SL

Skipper Mitchell Santner and Cole McConchie engineered a stunning lower-order recovery for New Zealand against Sri Lanka in the T20 World Cup. Their record 84-run partnership for the seventh wicket rescued the innings from a precarious 98/6. The duo plundered 70 runs in the final four overs, capitalizing on loose Sri Lankan bowling at the death. Despite three-wicket hauls for Maheesh Theekshana and Dushmantha Chameera, Sri Lanka will rue their finish after New Zealand posted a competitive 168/7.

Key Points: NZ's 168/7 vs SL in T20 WC: Santner, McConchie Heroics

  • Record 84-run 7th-wicket stand
  • 70 runs in final 4 overs
  • NZ slumped to 98/6
  • Theekshana, Chameera took 3 wickets each
  • SL's death bowling falters
2 min read

T20 WC: Santner, McConchie heroics lift New Zealand to 168/7 against SL

Mitchell Santner (47) and Cole McConchie (31*) stage a record 84-run 7th-wicket stand to rescue NZ to 168/7 against SL in T20 World Cup.

"Santner and McConchie plundered 70 runs in the final four overs - Match Report"

Colombo, Feb 25

Skipper Mitchell Santner and Cole McConchie produced one of the greatest lower-order recoveries in Men's T20 World Cup history to lift New Zealand to 168/7 in their 20 overs against Sri Lanka in their Super Eights clash at the R Premadasa Stadium on Wednesday.

The pair added 84 runs for the seventh wicket, the highest stand for that position in the tournament's history, surpassing the 74-run partnership between Michael Hussey and Steve Smith against Bangladesh at Bridgetown in 2010. Their effort - Santner making 47 and McConchie hitting 31 not out - came after New Zealand had slumped to 98/6 in 16 overs.

Santner and McConchie plundered 70 runs in the final four overs, punishing Sri Lanka's bowlers for bowling a string of full tosses and loose deliveries at the death. McConchie's clean hitting silenced the Colombo crowd, while Santner provided crucial support with timely boundaries to take the Blackcaps to a competitive score.

For Sri Lanka, Maheesh Theekshana and Dushmantha Chameera picked 3-30 and 3-38 respectively, but they will wonder if the damage done in the last four overs would bite them hard. In the start, New Zealand's top order faltered after a brisk start from Finn Allen, who hit four boundaries in the first three overs.

But after that, Sri Lanka's bowling show began - Allen chipped tamely back to Theekshana for a caught and bowled dismissal, while Tim Seifert pulled to deep square leg off Chameera. Rachin Ravindra and Glenn Phillips hit a few boundaries in a brief partnership.

But Sri Lanka continued to chip away - Phillips was castled by a ripper from Chameera, while Ravindra cut straight to backward point off Theekshana, who clean bowled Mark Chapman, while Dunith Wellalage dismissed Daryl Mitchell in the same fashion.

At that stage, Sri Lanka looked set to restrict New Zealand to a below-par total. But an 18-run 17th over off Chameera swung momentum back New Zealand's way, and Santner and McConchie drove home the advantage by amassing 21, 19 and 12 runs in final three overs to change the way New Zealand ended their innings.

Brief Scores: New Zealand 168/7 in 20 overs (Mitchell Santner 47, Rachin Ravindra 32; Maheesh Theekshana 3-30, Dushmantha Chameera 3-38) against Sri Lanka

- IANS

Share this article:

Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Santner is so underrated. A proper all-rounder. As a cricket fan in Mumbai, I love watching these gritty performances. 84 runs for the 7th wicket is insane! The Premadasa crowd must have been shocked into silence.
R
Rohit P
Sri Lanka had the match in their pocket and let it slip. Classic case of losing focus at the death. Our bowlers in the IPL need to learn from this too—the last 4 overs can change everything. 70 runs! That's criminal bowling.
A
Ananya R
McConchie played a blinder! From 98/6 to 168/7 is a fantastic recovery. Shows the importance of depth in batting. As an Indian fan, I'm a bit worried about facing this Kiwi spirit later in the tournament. They are dark horses for sure.
K
Karthik V
Respectfully, while the comeback was great, the article focuses too much on NZ heroics. Theekshana and Chameera bowled brilliantly for 16 overs. It was just a bad finish. The headline makes it sound like a one-sided show, which it wasn't for most of the innings.
P
Priya S
Wow! That's some partnership record. Hussey and Smith's record stood for so long. T20 cricket is just unbelievable sometimes. The momentum shift in the 17th over was the key. Exciting match for neutrals like me! 😊

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50