England hope in-form batsman Joe Root and "home" advantage can make
the difference against undefeated New Zealand in the first World
Twenty20 semi-final on Wednesday.
Eoin Morgan's team will be playing their third match in a row in New
Delhi, but for the nomadic Black Caps it will be their fifth different
venue in five tournament matches.
"We have become quite settled in Delhi," Morgan said at a pre-match press conference on Tuesday.
"We have got fantastic support, a fantastic following and actually we
have grown used to the pitch a lot more than probably the first game
that we were here."
Despite having to adapt to so many different surfaces, New Zealand's
formidable spin attack has so far thrived in Indian conditions.
The Kiwis have won the toss, batted first and used their spin bowlers
to great effect to defend totals in all four of their group matches.
But Root has also shown his class on different pitches in the
tournament, enhancing his reputation as one of the game's classiest
acts.
"Root is a class player and he is one of the best around in all three
formats of the game at the moment," allrounder Ben Stokes said of his
25-year-old team-mate.
Only India's Virat Kohli of all the players to reach the semi-finals
has scored more runs than Root's 168, which included a match-winning 83
against South Africa.
His knock against the Proteas fired England to a successful record
chase of 230 and got their bid for a second World T20 title back on
track after an opening-match defeat to the West Indies.
The 2010 champions then squeaked past minnows Afghanistan and
defending champions Sri Lanka to finish second in Group One on six
points behind the West Indies.
- English 'character' -
England were reduced to 85 for 7 against Afghanistan before eventually winning by 15 runs and then Angelo Mathews' valiant 73 almost saw England come unstuck in a nervous 10-run triumph over Sri Lanka.
England were reduced to 85 for 7 against Afghanistan before eventually winning by 15 runs and then Angelo Mathews' valiant 73 almost saw England come unstuck in a nervous 10-run triumph over Sri Lanka.
Morgan said he expected another "tough game of cricket" but that the
earlier matches had shown his team would not buckle under pressure.
"I think it shows the amount of character that we have within the group," he said.
Morgan said that while he felt excited, he did not feel as if he was on the verge of a world cup final.
"We are not getting too far ahead of ourselves as we have got a really tough game against a strong New Zealand side," he said.
"They've probably played the best cricket so far in the group stages
and we're going to have to come up with a very strong game of cricket
tomorrow to beat New Zealand."
New Zealand, who were unfancied coming into the tournament following
the retirement of former captain Brendon McCullum, have yet to put a
foot wrong on their travels since stunning favourites India in their
first game.
Captain Kane Williamson has deployed his spinners to supreme effect
as the Kiwis became the only side to progress unbeaten from the Super 10
stage, despite a schedule that took them to Nagpur, Dharamsala, Mohali
and Kolkata.
"We have done a lot of travel but the boys have been great and have embraced the schedule and the pitches," said Williamson, 25.
Spinners Mitchell Santner and Ish Sodhi have shared 17 wickets as
their two most experienced pacemen -- Tim Southee and Trent Boult --
warmed the substitutes' bench.
Teams
England (from): Eoin Morgan (captain), Moeen Ali,
Sam Billings, Jos Buttler, Liam Dawson, Alex Hales, Chris Jordan, Liam
Plunkett, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Jason Roy, Ben Stokes, Reece Topley,
James Vince, David Willey
New Zealand (from): Kane Williamson (captain), Corey
Anderson, Trent Boult, Martin Guptill, Grant Elliott, Colin Munro,
Mitchell McClenaghan, Nathan McCullum, Adam Milne, Henry Nicholls, Luke
Ronchi, Mitchell Santner, Ish Sodhi, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor