Aussie stars' career-best feats seal Rose Bowl triumph
Ellyse Perry has clubbed her maiden one-day international century to inspire Australia to a Rose Bowl series-clinching 95-run win against New Zealand.
Perry’s majestic unbeaten 107 from 110 balls underpinned Australia’s 7-247 on Sunday at Adelaide’s Karen Rolton Oval.
In reply, New Zealand crashed to 152 all out with Perry striking an early blow with the ball and spinner Jess Jonassen taking a career-best 5-27.
The victory gives Australia an unassailable 2-0 lead in the best-of-three series which concludes next Sunday in Melbourne.
And it extends Australia’s two-decade dominance over the Kiwis – they haven’t lost a ODI series to New Zealand since February 1999.
Perry had previously made four ODI scores in the 90s – three of them not outs – and her first century arrived in her 102nd match, the third-longest wait for a maiden century in women’s ODI cricket.
An extraordinary way for @EllysePerry to bring up her first ODI century! #AUSvNZ pic.twitter.com/1CDFMInvLJ
— #7Cricket (@7Cricket) February 24, 2019
Reaching the milestone on Sunday was a near-thing: with two balls left in the innings, Perry was on 97.
The right-hander thumped a lofted drive which was dropped at deep mid-on by Anna Peterson – the ball spilt through her hands and into the rope.
“It was fortunate that she misjudged it,” Perry said.
“That’s cricket … those things go your way sometimes and, other times, they don’t.”
Perry downplayed the significance of her breakthrough century.
“It’s just a number. I have never really worried too much about it,” she said.
“Sure, it’s cool to say now that I have scored a hundred for Australia. But in the scheme of things, it’s not a huge deal for me, to be honest.”
Perry then cracked a last-ball six, boosting an Australian total featuring handy knocks from Alyssa Healy, who was dropped twice in making 46 from 75 balls, and Beth Mooney (42 from 52 balls).
Perry and Mooney combined for a defining 98-run partnership for the fourth wicket which ended in a dramatic 42nd over, bowled by Kiwi legspinner Amelia Kerr.
Kerr had Mooney caught at midwicket, trapped Elyse Villani lbw for a duck two balls later and, next ball, bowled Ashleigh Gardner for a golden duck with a wrong’un to capture three wickets in four balls.
Her hat-trick ball in her next over was kept out by Perry, whose breakthrough ton came in her 102nd ODI and included eight fours and three sixes.
Perry took the new ball and dismissed the dangerous Suzie Bates (11) and returned 1-5 from her initial four overs – she finished with 1-15 from seven.
Sophie Devine (47 from 59 balls) and Amy Satterthwaite (37 from 54 deliveries) gave the visitors a sniff with a brisk 67-run third-wicket stand.
But Devine’s demise triggered a collapse: New Zealand lost their last eight wickets for 59 runs with left-arm tweaker Jonassen the chief destroyer.
.@JJonassen21 picks up the massive wicket of Devine!
She's LBW for 47, and New Zealand 3/93 (20.4) #AUSvNZ pic.twitter.com/HHv53LEwiH
— #7Cricket (@7Cricket) February 24, 2019
.@SouthernStars picking up LBWs for fun right now!
Jonassen gets Perkins, and New Zealand 5/119 (30.1) #AUSvNZ pic.twitter.com/9i37G5Pr5T
— #7Cricket (@7Cricket) February 24, 2019
.@JJonassen21 can't stop taking wickets!
She has FOUR, and @SouthernStars just two wickets away from victory #AUSvNZ pic.twitter.com/JctQAjvXKc
— #7Cricket (@7Cricket) February 24, 2019
Kiwi captain Satterthwaite said her batters failed to heed the lessons from Perry’s ton.
“She (Perry) has got one of the best set of minds on her … to be able absorb pressure,” Satterthwaite said.
“She has showed a lot of people how to produce a quality one-day innings.”
with AAP