T20 World Cup: Schedule | Points Table
Earlier, Canada’s teenage sensation Yuvraj Samra delivered a historic performance, scoring a brilliant 110 to become the youngest centurion in T20 World Cup history. His 65-ball innings, studded with six sixes and 11 fours, was the backbone of Canada’s 173 for 4. Samra and skipper Dilpreet Bajwa added 116 for the opening wicket — the highest opening partnership by an Associate side against a Full Member in the tournament — putting New Zealand under pressure.
New Zealand’s chase began shakily, losing two early wickets inside four overs. But Ravindra and Phillips quickly seized control. Ravindra anchored the innings with maturity, rotating strike effectively and punishing loose deliveries to bring up a fluent half-century.
Phillips then took centre stage. After a cautious start, he exploded spectacularly, smashing bowlers to all parts of the ground. His 22-ball fifty — New Zealand’s fastest in the competition — featured powerful straight hits, switch-hits and clean strikes over midwicket. He remained unbeaten on 76, while Ravindra finished on 59 not out, as New Zealand surged to victory.
The commanding win took New Zealand to six points and ensured their passage to the next stage. Canada, meanwhile, were left winless despite Samra’s landmark innings, as their bowling failed to defend a strong total against New Zealand’s dominant response.