Can India stop New Zealand's home juggernaut in high-scoring Hamilton?
The hosts have won each of their last 13 home ODIs, and each of their last five meetings with India
Big picture
With 16 matches, New Zealand have played the second-fewest ODIs of any team in the ongoing World Cup Super League. But just one more win, and they can topple India from the top of the table. Given that they've won each of their last 13 ODIs at home, the odds would favour them to do just that.
Form guide
New Zealand: WLLLW (Last five completed ODIs; most recent first)
India: LWWLW
In the spotlight
Kane Williamson has played just seven ODIs since the 2019 World Cup, with five of them coming this year. A troublesome elbow and the Covid-19 pandemic combined to limit his participation in the format, and his seven innings in this time have brought only one 50-plus score. That came at Eden Park on Friday, when he selflessly kept giving the dangerous Tom Latham the strike, and eventually ended up six short of a century. With less than a year left for the World Cup, New Zealand will not only hope their captain puts his fitness worries behind him and features more regularly in ODIs, but also that he makes big scores as often as he used to.
Team news
New Zealand were forced to leave Neesham out in Auckland due to a niggle. If he returns, they might have a difficult choice to make. While they will welcome the extra batting depth he offers if he replaces one of the four specialist quicks, they might need him to bowl his full ten-over quota, with Daryl Mitchell and Glenn Phillips having been used very sparingly of late.
Pitch and conditions
Seddon Park in Hamilton has hosted only three ODIs since 2020, with two of them producing first-innings scores in excess of 330. India scored 347 in one of them, only for New Zealand to hunt it down comfortably thanks to a Ross Taylor century. Expect another high-scoring game come Sunday. There remains a good chance of rain interrupting play, however, with showers forecast throughout the afternoon and evening.
Stats and trivia
- India posted contrasting totals of 92 in 2019 and 347 in 2020 while batting first in their last two ODIs at Seddon Park, and lost both matches.
- Tim Southee got to 200 ODI wickets while taking 3 for 73 in the first ODI, and two more wickets will take him past Chris Harris and into third place among New Zealand's highest ODI wicket-takers.
- Since Dhawan's ODI debut, only three batters have scored at least 6000 runs at a 90-plus strike rate. Dhawan's strike rate is second on that list, sandwiched between those of his team-mates Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma.
Quotes
"You can catch up, and give yourself more time. It's 50 overs… you've got that time up your sleeve to get the innings going and play your innings."
New Zealand batting coach Luke Ronchi on how Tom Latham and co pulled off a chase of 307 in Auckland despite a sedate start.
Himanshu Agrawal is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo