Bowling on a used pitch, the 17-year-old left-arm spinner struck in his second over, castling Mitchell Santner with one that spun back sharply with the batter camping on the back foot. The very next ball, he messed up Dane Cleaver’s stumps and then had Chad Bowes stumped soon after. Of his three wickets, Santner’s was the one Aayan said he enjoyed the most.
“Because that was a very good ball, and was also in the powerplay and was an important wicket,” he said. “I am feeling very happy. I got a chance in the powerplay and I got a wicket. I was trying to get the batters out.”
Does that put extra pressure on the youngster? “Not much, really,” Aayan said. “I am playing well now and will want to play like this in future as well. I want to take UAE far ahead. We have the capability to beat better teams in future.”
Having restricted New Zealand to 142 for 8, it was then the turn of the batters to do what they could not in the first T20I. And, it was Waseem who led from the front by smashing a 29-ball 55. He was given two reprieves, but made sure by the time he eventually fell, his side was well ahead of the asking rate.
“I am very happy with my team’s and my own performance,” he said. “I always try that whenever we win, we do it convincingly and I make a big contribution towards it. I want to dedicate this win to my newly-born son.”
“He is a quality player,” Waseem said. “He is unlucky that is he debuting so late but he has the experience. We were talking inside [the dressing room] that he has to finish the game and he promised me he would, and he has done it.”
“A lot of the credit has to go to the UAE team,” Southee said. “They outplayed us in all three facets and we know in T20 cricket if it’s not your day, then anything can happen. We probably didn’t learn enough from the other day, we made a few mistakes that were similar to the other day and we were made to pay for that. We just have to be bettered in all three areas.”