New Zealand's quiet achiever Santner makes big noise at World Cup

AFP

Mild-mannered Mitch Santner rarely hogs the limelight in the New Zealand team but the all-rounder has made a big noise at the World Cup, taking a screamer of a catch against Afghanistan and a milestone 100th ODI wicket.

Santner's haul of 3-39 helped the Black Caps thrash the Afghans by 149 runs and continue his side's perfect start to the global showpiece.

On the way, he became the second New Zealand spinner to reach 100 wickets in the format, following in the footsteps of his idol, Daniel Vettori.

Santner has work to do to catch Vettori, who bowed out of a brilliant career with 305 ODI victims.

"Yeah, it's obviously nice to get to that milestone," the 31-year-old told reporters of the 100 club.

"I guess I wasn't thinking about it too much leading into the game. It's just (about) trying to perform my role and do a job out there just like every other game.

"I think I'm 200 odd wickets behind (Vettori), so it's going to be a tough challenge to get there."

With 11 wickets so far, including a five-wicket haul against the Netherlands, Santner tops the bowling at the World Cup ahead of paceman team mate Matt Henry, who grabbed his ninth against the Afghans.

More accustomed to toiling on New Zealand's pace-friendly pitches, it is not often Santner gets to outshine the seamers.

"It's obviously nice to come here and see the ball spin a little bit," he said.

"You don't really get those (pitches) in New Zealand ... I think as a whole, we've been bowling in partnerships, that's what we talk about."

Afghanistan grassed a slew of catching chances at the MA Chidambaram stadium, the home ground of Santner's IPL team Chennai Super Kings.

Santner did not let the 15,000-strong crowd down, though, when he ran back and dived for a stunning one-handed catch to remove Hashmatullah Shahidi for eight when the Afghanistan captain miscued a pull off a short Lockie Ferguson ball.

"Lucky for me I've got really long arms and was able to kind of pluck it out," said Santner.

"I think Lockie's expression said it all. It was more of a surprise I caught it."

New Zealand's next match is a blockbuster against hosts India on Sunday in Dharamsala, a rare Indian pitch offering bounce and movement for seamers.

"I think what we've done well through this tournament is being able to adapt to different conditions," said Santner.

"Every pitch we've played on has been slightly different."

More from Sports

  • Rybakina defeats Ons at Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open

    Ons Jabeur exited the Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open at the quarter-final stage for the second consecutive year after losing a thrilling encounter against reigning champion Elena Rybakina, who joins Belinda Bencic, Ashlyn Krueger and Linda Noskova in the semi-finals.

  • Sharjah Warriorz beat MI Emirates by six wickets

    Tim Seifert’s stellar cameo at the DP World ILT20 Season 3 helped the Sharjah Warriorz to seal a stunning six-wicket win against defending champions MI Emirates in their winner-takes-it-all Eliminator clash at the Sheikh Zayed Stadium on Thursday evening.

  • Liverpool thrash Spurs to reach League Cup final

    Liverpool set up a League Cup final against Newcastle United after a 4-0 rout, and 4-1 aggregate victory, over a toothless Tottenham Hotspur at Anfield on Thursday.

  • Gill leads the way as India beat England in first ODI

    Shubman Gill, Shreyas Iyer and Axar Patel smashed half-centuries as India defeated England by four wickets in the opening one-day international on Thursday and took a 1-0 lead in the three-match series that is a warmup for the Champions Trophy.

  • Australia's Stoinis retires from ODIs

    All-rounder Marcus Stoinis has retired from one-day internationals with immediate effect to focus on T20 cricket, pulling himself out of Australia's Champions Trophy squad.