New Zealand thrash Australia in opening one-day international
- Published
One-day international, Auckland: |
New Zealand 307-8 (50 overs): Guptill 90, M Marsh 2-35 |
Australia 148 (24.2 overs): Wade 37, Boult 3-38 |
New Zealand won by 159 runs |
New Zealand took a 1-0 lead in the three-match Chappell-Hadlee series with a 159-run victory over Australia.
In the first ODI between the teams since Australia won the World Cup final in March last year, Martin Guptill hit five sixes in his 90 from 76 balls.
There were 13 sixes in total as the Black Caps posted 307-8 after being put in at Auckland's Eden Park.
Australia were 41-6 after nine overs and all out for 148 in 146 balls, their shortest completed ODI innings.
It was a fifth successive limited-overs defeat for the Australians, who lost a Twenty20 series 3-0 to India after being beaten in the last match of a one-day international series with the same opponents.
They are without coach Darren Lehmann, who will miss the first two matches of the series as he recovers from deep vein thrombosis.
New Zealand scored only one run in the opening two overs before skipper Brendon McCullum, in his final appearance at Eden Park before retirement, hit 20 in four balls from Josh Hazlewood.
After McCullum fell for 44, Guptill moved to 50 from 47 balls with a six and a four in consecutive deliveries, but was denied an 11th ODI century when he was run out by a direct hit from Glenn Maxwell in the 25th over.
In Australia's reply, Black Caps paceman Matt Henry - overlooked for the World Twenty20 - took 3-20 in his first four overs, including the wicket of captain Steve Smith, who was bowled off the inside edge for 18.
Trent Boult, meanwhile, took 3-21 in his opening five overs, dismissing Maxwell and Mitchell Marsh in the same over.
He also removed key opener David Warner lbw for 12, a decision not reviewed by the Australians though replays showed the ball would have missed the stumps.
The second match of the series takes place in Wellington on Saturday.
Australia will be without all-rounder James Faulkner for the remainder of the series because of a hamstring injury.
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