New Zealand vs Scotland
Dunedin, Australia (BBN)-New Zealand made it two wins out of two in Pool A with a bizarre three-wicket victory against Scotland in Dunedin.
The Scots were reduced to 12-4 in the fifth over before Matt Machan (56) and Richie Berrington (50) shared 97.
Four batsmen fell first ball, a World Cup first and only the third such instance in a one-day international, as they were all for 142 in the 37th over, reports BBC.
But New Zealand had more alarms than expected in a curious run chase, before winning with 25.1 overs to spare.
The Scots, in their third World Cup campaign, are yet to win in nine matches, but the relatively narrow margin of this defeat was difficult to fathom.
They thrashed their higher ranked fellow qualifiers Ireland by 179 runs in a recent warm-up game yet it quickly became apparent they would not be emulating the Irish team’s impressive victory over West Indies on Monday.
Facing an in-form New Zealand on their own patch was a rather different proposition to a fragmented Windies, and the co-hosts, six times semi-finalists, justified their position as leading contenders for the trophy with a fine display in the field after winning the toss.
Left-arm seamer Trent Boult expertly exploited the conditions, swinging the ball back into the right-handers at pace to claim wickets with his opening two deliveries in the second over.
Tim Southee also struck with consecutive deliveries and there was concern the lowest World Cup total of 36 by Canada was in jeopardy, but Sussex left-hander Machan played with calm assurance in a 79-ball innings to restore some respectability.
Wily spinner Daniel Vettori wrapped up the innings with successive wickets and the Kiwis had almost 40 minutes of batting before the official lunch interval.
McCullum and opening partner Martin Guptill appeared to want to reach the target in the nine overs bowled before the break, with number of wickets lost not affecting a team’s overall run-rate in the group table, and both were caught behind.
The prolific Kane Williamson top-scored with 38 but was one of four wickets to fall for 31 in a surprisingly ragged batting display from the Kiwis, who next face England in a day-night fixture in Wellington on Friday.
BBN/SS-17Feb15-10:00am (BST)