Live: 2019 Cricket World Cup | AUS vs WI: Coulter-Nile, Starc help Australia beat West Indies

West Indies made one change, bringing in Evin Lewis in place of Darren Bravo, while Australia decided to play with the same side.

June 06, 2019 02:40 pm | Updated 11:53 pm IST

Australia's Steve Smith plays a shot during the 2019 Cricket World Cup match against West Indies in Nottingham on June 6, 2019.

Australia's Steve Smith plays a shot during the 2019 Cricket World Cup match against West Indies in Nottingham on June 6, 2019.

Stuttering at 38-4 and getting roughed up by West Indies’ pacemen at the Cricket World Cup, Australia was facing yet another painful Trent Bridge experience.

Nathan Coulter-Nile and Mitchell Starc came to the rescue.

Coulter-Nile stroked a career-best 92 off 60 balls the highest score by a batsman at No. 8 or lower in the tournament’s history to help lift the Australians from a perilous position of 38-4 to 288 all out. Starc then snared the first five-wicket haul of this World Cup to seal a 15-run win for the defending champions.

Starc had 5-46, including a late burst of 4-2 in 11 balls, as West Indies was restricted to 273-9 despite half-centuries by Shai Hope (68) and captain Jason Holder (51).

Australia made it two wins from two matches, after a seven-wicket win over Afghanistan, to join New Zealand on four points.

 

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The victory enabled the Australians to exorcise some awful memories at the Nottingham venue, having conceded an one-day international cricket world-record 481 here to England last year and also been knocked over for 60 in a test match innings in 2015.

Coulter-Nile’s salvo came out of nowhere, his previous best ODI score being 34. Indeed, he had only reached double-figures five times in his 28 previous ODIs.

But he dominated the partnership of 102 runs with Steve Smith, who was much the steadier in his 103-ball 73, and hit four lusty sixes as well as eight boundaries.

Smith, who was lightly booed onto and off the field for his part in the Australian ball-tampering scandal of last year in South Africa, anchored Australia’s recovery from 38-4 and 79-5 on the same pitch on which England made that world-record 481 last June.

At one stage, Australia seemed set to slump to its lowest total at a World Cup, beating 129 against India at Chelmsford in 1983.

Faced with mostly short-pitched bowling, Australia became the first team this tournament to lose four wickets in the opening power play with Sheldon Cottrell standing out for more than one reason. He dismissed David Warner (3) and Glenn Maxwell (0), celebrating his wickets with a military-style salute a nod to his army background.

The salute came out again toward the end of the innings when he produced a catch that rivals Ben Stokes’ opening-day take on the boundary as the best of the tournament. Snaring Smith with a one-handed catch just inside the boundary at deep-backward square leg, Cottrell tossed the ball in the air as he weaved outside and back inside the boundary rope before collect the ball again.

Wicketkeeper Alex Carey, who shared a 68-run stand with Smith, also weighed in with a crucial 45.

Pacemen accounted for all 10 wickets, just like when West Indies bounced out Pakistan for 105 last week in a seven-wicket win here in Nottingham. They were just as aggressive as six days ago Oshane Thomas’ roughed up Uswan Khawaja, smacking him in the grille with one ball but not as precise. They sent down a total of 24 wides, five coming off Thomas’ first ball.

Wickets fell regularly in the chase the biggest stand was 68 between Hope and Nicholas Pooran (40) and West Indies also had to deal with some poor calls from the umpires, four of which were overturned on review.

Veteran opener Chris Gayle was given two of the reprieves by DRS, both when on 5, before his typically chaotic innings was finally ended by Starc on 21. But not before he passed 1,000 World Cup runs.

Starc dismissed both of them, and also took the final two wickets of the innings in a burst that proved just as important as Coulter-Nile’s knock in Australia’s innings. — AP

Teams:

West Indies: Chris Gayle, Evin Lewis, Shai Hope (w), Nicholas Pooran, Shimron Hetmyer, Andre Russell, Jason Holder (c), Carlos Brathwaite, Ashley Nurse, Sheldon Cottrell, Oshane Thomas

Australia: Aaron Finch (c), David Warner, Usman Khawaja, Steven Smith, Glenn Maxwell, Marcus Stoinis, Alex Carey (w), Nathan Coulter-Nile, Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Adam Zampa.

Read the full preview here.

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