The evolving Black Caps T20 team may have unearthed a reliable weapon at the death – “a very level-headed Cantabrian bloke” named Zak Foulkes. The 22-year-old finished off his side’s comeback victory in the series opener against Sri Lanka , claiming two wickets while conceding five runs in an eight-run triumph at Bay Oval. And if tonight’s second match is on the line at the same venue, expect skipper Mitchell Santner to again throw the ball in Foulkes’ direction.
Saturday night was his first international on home soil , treating a crowd including his grandparents to a thrilling win. But it was far from his first experience at being entrusted with the late overs while wearing the black cap. On debut, against Pakistan in April, Foulkes was given the 20th over by then-captain Michael Bracewell.
The same was true a couple of days later and the seamer responded with a wicket while allowing seven runs. Foulkes’ third and fourth internationals were in Sri Lanka last month; asked to bowl the penultimate over on each occasion, he delivered a wicket and 16 runs. Game No 5 was his most impressive closing effort yet, especially since his initial three overs had come at a cost of 37 runs.
But shaking off setbacks is an essential skill in bowling at the death, both for shutting down free-swinging batters and repaying teammates’ faith. “The way Foulksy closed out that last over, he obviously had a bit of a tough run those first few, and for a 22-year-old he’s got a serio.