Jacob Duffy the slayer as Sri Lanka suffer horror collapse
New Zealand 172 for 8 (Mitchell 62, Bracewell 59, Binura 2-22) beat Sri Lanka 164 for 8 (Nissanka 90, Mendis 46, Duffy 3-21) by 8 runs
It was a heist for the ages in Mount Maunganui as New Zealand secured an eight-run win in the first T20I, and with it took a 1-0 lead in the three-match series. But more importantly it was a lesson in fight from the hosts, one the visitors would do well to take note of.
For much of the game it had looked Sri Lanka's to lose. The first instance was when New Zealand were reeling on 65 for 5 midway through their innings, and the second when Sri Lanka were cruising after a 121-run opening stand needing just 52 off 40 deliveries.
A collapse for the ages
Sure, three balls later that equation changed to 52 needed with seven wickets in hand, after Duffy had made sure Kusal Perera and Kamindu Mendis followed Kusal to the dressing room. But, surely not?
Hasaranga being run out without facing a ball in the final over summed up Sri Lanka's disastrous end to the game.
Binura leads Sri Lanka's early charge
Mitchell Santner had been concerned about about a "green tinge" on the surface having been put in to bat, and after the first ten overs his concerns seemed warranted as New Zealand had stumbled to 65 for 5.
Pathum Nissanka's 90 from 60 balls seemed to have put Sri Lanka firmly in control•
Binura's opening burst of three overs went for just 12 runs, before a Hasaranga double-strike in the 10th over really rammed home Sri Lanka's early dominance.
Mitchell and Bracewell counter brutally
If the first half of the innings belonged to Sri Lanka, the second was well and truly New Zealand's. After a couple of overs treading water, Bracewell signalled his intent to shift gears with a pair of boundaries off Maheesh Theekshana in the 14th, before unloading on an off-colour Matheesha Pathirana an over later - a flicked six into the grass banks and a monster loft over wide long-off the highlights in a 22-run over.
Bracewell's power was on total display from then on as Hasaranga and Binura were also both taken for maximums over the next few overs. And there would be no respite for Sri Lanka at the other end either, as Mitchell struck in lockstep with his partner, the pair even bringing up their respective fifties off consecutive deliveries.
In total, 107 runs were struck between overs 10-20, with 85 of those coming off the six-over period from 13-19. Only an excellent final over from Theekshana, where three wickets fell for just three runs ensured New Zealand were kept below 180.
Pathirana's off day
Four overs for 60 runs and a solitary wicket marked a bad day at the office for Pathirana, but it's the three no-balls (and subsequent free hits) that will no doubt have Sri Lanka's coaching staff pulling their hair out. That one of those accounted for the wicket of Mitchell, when he was on eight, will be particularly grating.
Pathirana also struggled with identifying an effective length, constantly bowling fuller than ideal - surprising considering the success Binura had had by hitting the deck harder, not to mention the success Pathirana himself has had with similar lengths in the past.