#CWC15: New Zealand's Brendan McCullum aims to give Daniel Vettori a fairytale send-off

Sport360 staff 01:36 26/03/2015
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  • This one’s for you: McCullum (right) said the team wants to win the final for Vettori.

    Brendon McCullum conceded Daniel Vettori had probably played his last international innings on home soil, saying New Zealand were intent on giving the veteran a fairytale send-off in the World Cup final.

    Vettori was in the middle at Auckland’s Eden Park on Tuesday night when the Black Caps clinched a spot in Sunday’s title decider in Melbourne with a dramatic oneball-to-spare victory over South Africa.

    The 36-year-old Vettori, who scored a crucial boundary at the death to help seal the four-wicket win, has been coy about his future plans but McCullum said “this was potentially his last game on New Zealand soil”.

    “Last night with him out there at the end, that’s a memory he’ll never forget,” McCullum said. “Hopefully, we’ve got one more game, one more big fairytale finish for him and then we’ll celebrate.”Commitment: New Zealand have reached the final thanks to a real team effort.

    The Black Caps skipper said Vettori, who claimed his 300th one-day international wicket earlier in the tournament, was still experiencing pain from a back injury that almost ended his career.

    “He’s played a lot of his cricket with bumps and bruises and niggles and strains,” McCullum said. “People probably don’t realise but he’s had to overcome quite a bit to continue to get out there and represent New Zealand. He’s a tough customer and he’s been an amazing servant for New Zealand cricket.”

    McCullum said he was still savouring the “special” semi-final win, New Zealand’s first in seven attempts, and had not yet thought about the tournament decider.

    “We’ll deal with the final in the next couple of days. Now it’s all about letting the South Africa win sink in,” he said. “When you’ve achieved something as special as we have, you don’t want to park it too quickly. You have to allow yourself the opportunity to stop and smell the roses and identify what’s been the catalyst to your success.”

    The New Zealand skipper, who scored a Test triple century last year, said the feeling when Grant Elliott smashed a six to send the Black Caps into the final was the best of his career.

    “That was without doubt the best feeling I’ve been a part of,” he added. “I’ve had many people congratulate us and say it was the single greatest sporting event that they’ve ever been to, which is pretty amazing, to be a part of that.”

    Meanwhile, New Zealanders hailed the Black Caps’ semi-final win as one of the country’s top sporting moments and finally began dreaming of even greater glory in the tournament decider.

    “One to go,” trumpeted the front page of the New Zealand Herald, while the Dominion Post’s back page headline described victory over the Proteas as “The stuff that dreams are made of”.

    There was also relief at a fourwicket win achieved with just one ball to spare. Former Black Cap bowler Jacob Oram said McCullum’s men had shown their class and should be favourites.

    “It looks at the moment like nothing daunts them,” he said. “The bigger the expectation, the more that’s asked, the bigger they stand up. I honestly don’t think this World Cup final is going to daunt these guys.”

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