India vs New Zealand: Taking out Indian openers early was massive, says Colin Munro
Kiwi pacer Trent Boult sent back openers Indian Shikhar Dhawan and Rohit Sharma in the second over to leave the hosts struggling at 11/2 while chasing an imposing target of 197 in the second T20I at Rajkot.
Centurion Colin Munro said dismissing the in-form India openers early was "massive" and credited their "outstanding" bowling attack for New Zealand's 40-run win in the second T20 International in Rajkot. Left-arm pace bowler Trent Boult sent back openers Shikhar Dhawan and Rohit Sharma in the second over to leave the hosts struggling at 11/2, chasing an imposing score of 196/2, built mainly on Munro's belligerent knock of 109, not out that contained 7 sixes and as many fours.
"(It was) massive. (Grabbing) wickets halt the momentum of the team and those two players are in good form like we saw in the first T20," said Munro in the post-game press conference.
"They put on a record partnership (158) and for Trent to come out, stand up and lead the attack like he did was outstanding. As was Adam Milne.
"To come out and bowl, like they did, gave us a lot of momentum and belief and then the spinners (Mitchell Santner and Ish Sodhi) could come in and do their thing knowing that they were behind required rate from the start," added the South Africa-born player.
India's run-chase was halted at 156 for 7 as the visitors notched up a resounding 40-run victory after they had suffered a 53-run loss in the series opener at Delhi. The deciding last game will be played on November 7 at Thiruvananthapuram.
On his own sensational knock, the man of the match Munro, only the fourth batsman to score two T20 hundreds, said he relished the shortest form of the game.
"I enjoy Twenty20, it's a game where you know it's a short game and you go out there to express yourself and when it comes off, it comes off. Sometimes you put too much pressure on yourself in the longer form where you've got to score runs all the time," he said.
"In Twenty20, you just got to go out there and express yourself and take the good with the bad. Sometimes it comes off like it did tonight and the other night it didn't come off. You just got to go with the flow."
Talking about his two T20 centuries, Munro said: "Obviously the first hundred you score for your country, it always means a lot against Bangladesh. Again to come to India, play against a tough opposition and score a hundred and bat throughout the innings means a heck of a lot.
"The wicket was very good. I thought, when the bowlers bowled back of a length, changed their pace a little bit with a straighter line, I did find it quite tough to score. We bowled outstandingly well," he added.
The left-handed batsman, who put on a century stand (105) with fellow-opener Martin Guptill (45 in 41 balls), said they have a good understanding.
"I think Guppy had a lot of the strike early and he got off to a good start. He said the wicket was good so just play your natural game. And that helps me, Guppy facing the first couple of balls. I think that's a tough role because wicket could be sticky, skiddy, so he enjoys taking the first ball.
"The communication we have at the top of the order and throughout our batting is key in order to make (set up) those big targets. Guppy and I get along really well and it just naturally happens," he said.
Munro also heaped praise on Santner and Sodhi, saying the two complemented each other well.
"Spinners were outstanding, I think. You saw them bowl in the T20 World Cup here and they were outstanding. In any conditions, those two have bowled really well in tandem. They come from the same association back home, Northern Districts," he said.
"They're always talking to each other as well, on and off the field about what pace to bowl and what areas to bowl to certain batters. I think they just feed off each other," said the Durban-born batsman.
The Black Caps surprisingly left out wicketkeeper and in-form batsman Tom Latham, described by Indian left-arm spinner Axar Patel as the visitors' best player of spin.
"I think it's a tough one on Tommy. He has been an outstanding batter on this tour so far. I think it's just that both keepers are a different kind of a bat, and I think they went with Glenn (Phillips) because of a different skill set.
"Maybe batting towards the death, few more options I think, I'm not too sure exactly, but that's my take on it."
(With PTI Inputs)