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Argus News - Men’s ODI WC: 'Chose To Do On The Toss What Was Best On The Pitch', Says Glenn Phillips

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Men’s ODI WC: 'Chose To Do On The Toss What Was Best On The Pitch', Says Glenn Phillips

Pabitra Mohan Senapaty
Browse all articles by Pabitra Mohan Senapaty
·2 years ago·3 min read
Men’s ODI WC: 'Chose To Do On The Toss What Was Best On The Pitch', Says Glenn Phillips

Key Points

After losing to South Africa by 190 runs in the Men’s ODI World Cup, New Zealand all-rounder Glenn Phillips said the team had any regrets about deciding to put the Proteas into batting first, citing the information it was given about the pitch and conditions.

Pune, Nov 2: After losing to South Africa by 190 runs in the Men’s ODI World Cup, New Zealand all-rounder Glenn Phillips said the team had any regrets about deciding to put the Proteas into batting first, citing the information it was given about the pitch and conditions.

New Zealand came into criticism for making South Africa do what they like doing: batting first. It proved to be game-changing as South Africa posted 357/4, with Quinton de Kock and Rassie van der Dussen making centuries, along with David Miller making a quick fifty.

“At the end of the day, we chose to do a toss what we thought was best on this pitch with the information that's been given and that's what we go by every game. Obviously South Africa are incredibly strong batting first.”

“But we've got an incredibly good bowling lineup and there was no reason that we couldn't have restricted them to a total that could have been a lot easier to chase on there. Playing on at the end, I definitely thought it got better as well. So, I think had things gone slightly differently, we could definitely have come a lot closer than we did,” said Phillips in the post-match press conference.

New Zealand also have injury concerns in Matt Henry going off due to a right hamstring concern and is awaiting result of an MRI scan, with Lockie Ferguson also out due to an achilles injury. Against South Africa, their fielding wasn’t up to the mark, with Trent Boult dropping two chances.

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“We definitely recognized that they were playing the style of cricket that they wanted to play. But when any team tries to accelerate, you get opportunities. Quinton had a little bit of luck as well, which helps. Sometimes you need that as a batter and then when that luck goes your way, the runs start to flow, things start to move a little bit, and once momentum starts changing, it's hard to bring it back.”

“At the end of the day a couple of tough chances were dropped, a missed run out when his back was turned to the bowler's end. You have no idea where Quinton's actually standing. Obviously, he had a little bit more time than he thought.”

Read More: ICC WC: South Africa Dominate New Zealand For Massive 190-Run Win

“But at the end of the day, it's not like we've been dropping straightforward chances or creating a lot of blunders in the field. We've definitely put a lot of pressure on the opposition in the field and we've saved a lot of runs and obviously sometimes people drop catches and that's just the way things go,” he elaborated.

(IANS Inputs)

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Men’s ODI WC: 'Chose To Do On The Toss What Was Best On The Pitch', Says Glenn Phillips | Argus English