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RESULT
2nd ODI (D/N), Canberra, December 06, 2016, New Zealand tour of Australia
(47.2/50 ov, T:379) 262

Australia won by 116 runs

Player Of The Match
119 (115) & 2 catches
david-warner
Preview

New Zealand face must-win after forgettable start

Martin Guptill's good form should work in the favour of the visitors as they face a must-win situation in Canberra

Match facts

December 6, 2016
Start time 1420 local (0320 GMT)

Big Picture

New Zealand must have left the Sydney Cricket Ground on Sunday night thinking, "if only". If only they had asked for a review when Steven Smith was given not-out by umpire Mick Martell after being trapped lbw on 14, the first ODI might have unfolded quite differently. Trent Boult's fine delivery had swung in and trapped Smith in front, but New Zealand declined to refer Martell's decision upstairs. "There was plenty of chat afterwards about that," New Zealand coach Mike Hesson said. "There were two sounds and the possibility of an inside edge. We're all well aware there wasn't. That was the thinking and you could understand it. It was a little bit frustrating." The reason it was frustrating was that Smith went on to accumulate 164 and set up a big win for Australia.
The teams now move on to Canberra with Australia 1-0 up in the three-match series, so New Zealand must win at the Manuka Oval on Tuesday to have any hope of retaining the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy. The good news for New Zealand is that they had one batsman who looked every bit as dangerous as Smith at the SCG, but unfortunately for them, Martin Guptill couldn't go quite as deep into the innings as Smith, and fell for 114 off 102 balls. The toss may be particularly important in Canberra, where big runs are generally available, and the team batting first has won the six most recent ODIs.

Form guide

Australia: WLLLL (last five completed matches, most recent first)
New Zealand: LLWLW

In the spotlight

A golden duck in Sydney was hardly the start Aaron Finch wanted in this series, but he will be pleased to arrive in Canberra for the second game. Take a look at Finch's scores in his three ODIs at the Manuka Oval: 38, 109 and 107. His last two hundreds at the venue have come against South Africa and India, and Finch could use a big score again: in 18 ODIs since the end of the previous home summer, Finch has averaged just 26.25.
After New Zealand lost Guptill, their hopes of chasing down the hefty target in Sydney faded. But, while Colin Munro was at the crease, there remained at least a tiny glimmer of hope. Munro struck four fours and one six in his innings of 49, and put on 50 for the eighth wicket with Matt Henry. While they were together, the required run rate hovered around nine an over, but at least it didn't balloon too much further. But when they both holed out in one Pat Cummins over - the 44th of the innings - the dream was dashed. "It was a different sort of knock than what I'm used to playing," Munro said. "Given that role to try and take things a bit deeper in the innings sort of suits my game. Hopefully, in the games to come, we can have a few extra batters around me at the end and have a bit of a hit."

Team news

Glenn Maxwell and James Faulkner were the two members of Australia's 13-man squad left out in Sydney, and the selectors may wish to retain the winning XI in an attempt to secure the series.
Australia (possible) 1 David Warner, 2 Aaron Finch, 3, Steven Smith (capt), 4 George Bailey, 5 Mitchell Marsh, 6 Travis Head, 7 Matthew Wade (wk), 8 Mitchell Starc, 9 Adam Zampa, 10 Pat Cummins, 11 Josh Hazlewood.
Lockie Ferguson picked up a wicket in his first international over, but the rest of his debut was rather costly: he leaked 73 runs from nine overs, sent down four no-balls and therefore four free hits, and also cramped up. Tim Southee might come in for Ferguson in Canberra. New Zealand may also wonder if their batting order could be strengthened by the inclusion of Henry Nicholls.
New Zealand (possible) 1 Tom Latham, 2 Martin Guptill, 3 Kane Williamson (capt), 4 Jimmy Neesham, 5 Colin Munro, 6 BJ Watling (wk), 7 Mitchell Santner, 8 Colin de Grandhomme, 9 Matt Henry, 10 Tim Southee, 11 Trent Boult.

Pitch and conditions

Manuka Oval is the kind of venue where big totals are on offer batting first, and chasing can be a challenge. The forecast for Tuesday is for a shower or two and a top temperature of 28 degrees centigrade.

Stats and trivia

  • In Sydney, Guptill became the tenth-fastest player to 5000 ODI runs, behind Hashim Amla, Viv Richards, Virat Kohli, Brian Lara, Gordon Greenidge, AB de Villiers, Sourav Ganguly, Dean Jones and Graeme Smith.
  • This will be Kane Williamson's 100th one-day international.
  • Adam Zampa enters this game as the world's leading ODI wicket-taker in 2016, with 30 scalps at 27.80. His feat is all the more impressive given he didn't make his ODI debut until February in New Zealand.

Quotes

"We were a little bit frustrated with the fact we chased the game with the ball. We had some good plans in place and perhaps we need to back those a bit more. We weren't far off."
Mike Hesson, the New Zealand coach, after the loss in Sydney

Brydon Coverdale is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @brydoncoverdale

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