Cricket: Skipper in fine form as Cup draws near

Brendon McCullum acknowledges the crowd after reaching his century against Sri Lanka. Photo Getty...
Brendon McCullum acknowledges the crowd after reaching his century against Sri Lanka. Photo Getty Images
Test match batting, check; ODI batting sorted.

It's been a while between one-day hundreds for Brendon McCullum.

His last century before yesterday's 117 at Seddon Park was 33 innings ago. So you could say he was due.

And when it came it was worth waiting for.

It's been said before this summer - notably in his hammering of 195 in the first test at Christchurch when the New Zealand skipper lit up Boxing Day - but the game doesn't look fair when McCullum is in full flight.

Clearly he's seeing it like a melon and is cashing in.

Only Nathan Astle (16), Ross Taylor (11) and Stephen Fleming (8) have made more ODI centuries although considering his batting position for much of his career, it could be argued that five tons is a light return in 234 matches.

Yesterday he flew past 50 in 39 balls - slowcoach by comparison with his 19-ball effort in the opening ODI last Sunday - but he was measured in the sense that he didn't go hard at every delivery. Indeed 49 of his 99 balls were runless.

But balancing that were 12 fours and five sixes, and if he did go quiet occasionally, it didn't last long, either courtesy of thunderous blows which bruised the boundary fences, or clearing them, or with singles or hard run twos.

McCullum entered the 70s slapping Jeevan Mendis for six over the long on fielder, which suggested absolute self belief, and knowledge of how short some of the boundaries are at Seddon Park, depending on the placement of the pitch.

The eighties arrived with a fierce slap over long off from Mendis. There was one more maximum, bouncing Sachithra off the top of the sightscreen shortly before his departure.

It took a clever piece of bowling by Mendis to remove him, the ball held back a touch and a return catch the result.

But with the World Cup nine games away after last night, McCullum looks to be in rare form. His timing with the cup in mind is certainly impressive.

New Zealand need the skipper firing. There are others in New Zealand's top six who'd wish they had a bit of McCullum's touch right now.

Players, rugby or cricket, like talking about work ons. There's no shortage of them at the moment for the batsmen. Like running between the wickets for a start.

Brendon McCullum's ODI centuries

166: v Ireland, Aberdeen, 2008

131: v Pakistan, Abu Dhabi, 2009

101: v Canada, Mumbai, 2011

119: v Zimbabwe, Napier, 2012

117: v Sri Lanka, Hamilton, 2014

ODI average: 30.67 from 234 games

- David Leggat of the New Zealand Herald in Hamilton

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