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regular-article-logo Monday, 23 December 2024

Adam Milne & Tim Seifert make it 1-1

Auckland-born Cotton became first female umpire to stand in men’s international match between two ICC full-member countries

Reuters Dunedin Published 06.04.23, 05:02 AM
Man of the Match Adam Milne (left) celebrates with teammates after dismissing Dilshan Madushanka and completing his five-for in the second T20I against Sri Lanka in Dunedin on Wednesday

Man of the Match Adam Milne (left) celebrates with teammates after dismissing Dilshan Madushanka and completing his five-for in the second T20I against Sri Lanka in Dunedin on Wednesday Getty Images

Adam Milne’s fifer and Tim Seifert’s unbeaten 79 set up New Zealand’s nine-wicket win over Sri La­nka in the second T20I on Wednesday, with the match also earning female umpire Kim Cotton a place in history.

Seifert smashed six sixes in his 43-ball blitz as the hosts romped home with 5.2 overs to spare to level the three-match series and gain a psychological edge ahead of Saturday’s decider in Queenstown.

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Auckland-born Cotton became the first female umpire to stand in a men’s international match between two ICC full-member countries.

Earlier, Milne claimed a career-best 5/26 to help bowl out Sri Lanka for 141 in 19 overs, which proved below-par at Dunedin’s University Oval, which has relatively short boundaries.

Sri Lanka lost their openers cheaply and after Kusal Perera (35), Dhananjaya de Silva (37) and Charith Asalanka (24) shored them up the wheels came off their innings in the second half.

Sri Lanka, who had won the opening match on Sunday via Super Over, lost their last eight wickets for 50 runs with Milne claiming three in the final over.

New Zealand’s chase got off to a blazing start with Chad Bowes (31) hitting Dilshan Madushanka for four boundaries in the second over, including three in a row, throwing the seamer out of the attack.

Seifert ensured there was no respite for the tourists even after Bowes fell as he tore into the Sri Lankan attack, sealing New Zealand’s victory with back-to-back sixes.

Sri Lanka’s sloppy catching did not help their cause either as they dropped both Seifert and Tom Latham, who remained unbeaten on 20.

Brief scores: Sri Lanka 141 all out in 19 overs (K. Perera 35, A. Milne 5/26); NZ 146/1 in 14.4 overs (T. Seiffert 79 no.o). NZ won by 9 wickets.

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