Travis Head produces the winning hand in 388 vs 383 nail-biter

In the foothills of the highest peaks in the world, Dharamsala hosted the highest-scoring World Cup game of all-time as Australia held off New Zealand in a 771-run thriller that reached giddying heights and featured records galore. Travis Head made a dazzling 59-ball century as he and David Warner clubbed 118 runs in the opening powerplay and shared a stunning 175-run opening stand to support Australia's sloping 388, turning into the principal side in ODI history to post three continuous 350 or more scores. However, Rachin Ravindra created a stunning 77-ball century of his own while Daryl Mitchell proceeded with his relationship with Dharamsala in making 54 to allow New Zealand an opportunity to pull off their most elevated ever ODI pursue. It was passed on to James Neesham toward the end, as it had been On the planet Cup last in 2019, and as he did on that event he went inside one hit of taking the game with an extraordinary 58 off 39 balls. Be that as it may, he finished like his Master's accomplice Martin Guptill, cutting a miserable figure face first on the turf having been run out off the penultimate ball. Mitchell Starc, having been looted all over the place, held his nerve off the last ball to deny Lockie Ferguson the six he really wanted and hand Australia an essential two focuses. Starc might have effortlessly been the bad guy for Australia. New Zealand required 43 off 18 balls with two wickets close by. Starc and Josh Hazlewood missed their imprints. Trent Boult got some private reclamation for 2019 when Marnus Labuschagne remained on the rope at long-on to hand him six runs. Starc had 19 to play with toward the beginning of the last finished yet was permitted just four men outside the circle in view of Australia's delayed over-rate. He conveyed five wides second ball to decrease the condition to 13 off five. However, he nailed his yorkers as Neesham couldn't find the rope and Australia's sweepers made a few incredible recoveries before Labuschagne and Josh Inglis joined to run out Neesham off the second-last ball. In a game overwhelmed by hitters, Adam Zampa's 3 for 74 demonstrated crucial for Australia, including the critical wickets of Mitchell, Tom Latham and Mitchell Santner. In any case, he wasn't the most ideal bowler in the game. Glenn Phillips delivered shocking vocation best figures of 3 for 37 for New Zealand, including 30 speck balls, to without any help drag his side once more into the challenge after Head and Warner took steps to kill it off in 13 overs of bloodletting after Australia were sent in to bat. Head supported Australia's selectors' bet in keeping him in Australia's 15-man crew regardless of not being accessible for the initial five games. Head and Warner came to confounding levels in the Himalayan air with a savage showcase of batting that left New Zealand's in-structure quick bowlers broken in whole self with Ferguson experiencing an Achilles injury on top of three overs for 38. Head clubbed 109 from 67 balls while Warner beat 81 from 65. The pair treated the bowling with sheer hatred on the grand batting strip. Warner was savage on anything short arriving at 50 for the third consecutive innings, off only 28 balls. Head seemed as though he had never been away, in spite of scarcely getting a bat for quite a long time. He pummeled anything full arriving at 50 off 25 balls, Australia's second-quickest ever in the competition and the quickest by a World Cup debutant. Phillips' presentation in the fourteenth over changed the game. Australia were 144 for 0 yet he quickly secured Warner with impeccable lines and lengths. He never parted with the stumps, scarcely overpitched or dropped short. Warner had scored 65 off 36 yet figured out how to score only 16 from his last 29 conveyances including eight specks off Phillips before he chipped a return get in the twentieth over. While turn slowed down Warner, Head continued to go bravely. He had some karma. He was dropped two times, once on 70 by Santner jumping one-gave full length to one side off his own bowling, and once on 75 by Phillips standing close at midwicket as Head pounded a full-blooded pull shot. Go to his hundred years off 59 balls, the quickest by an opener in World Cups. In any case, he also was bamboozled by Phillips, playing back to a more full, faster ball and lost his center stump. Then, at that point, Australia's standard center request stagger unfurled. Mitchell Swamp truly battled having been moved back to No. 3 on Head's return. His absence of strike-turn caused an upset Steven Smith to opening out to mid-off of Phillips. Labuschagne likewise battled. The pair permitted Phillips to bowl 30 dab balls in his 10 overs and scored only 54 off 77 balls between them before the two of them tumbled to Santner. Australia seemed as though they had squandered the great work of Warner and Head until Glenn Maxwell, Josh Inglis and Pat Cummins smacked 11 fours and seven sixes between them in the demise overs to assist Australia with posting a forcing 388. Maxwell was again brilliant making 41 off only 24 balls. Inglis made 38 off 28 and Cummins 37 off only 14 with four transcending strikes. However, both were helped by a few unique drops from the New Zealand outfielders. Australia were 387 for 6 with two overs to go however lost 4 for 1 to be bowled out with four balls left with Trent Boult getting three wickets in an over. It didn't appear to be an issue at that point yet it almost demonstrated exorbitant. Australia 388 (Head 109, Warner 81, Phillips 3-37, Boult 3-77) beat New Zealand 383 for 9 (Ravindra 116, Neesham 58, Mitchell 54, Zampa 3-74) by five runs