Sometimes, in fact, more often than not, things fall into place by design. Grant Elliott was so good on that fateful night in Auckland that with the brandishing of the willow, he sent a rapturous Eden Park into delirium while simultaneously sending the South African players and supporters into what, at the time, looked like a bottomless pit of despair.
With five needed off two balls, Dale Steyn banged a back of a length delivery and Elliott lifted it over wide long-on to power New Zealand to its maiden World Cup final even as South Africa was left to rue another defeat in the closing stages of a marquee event.
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Elliott, with arms aloft, let out a roar that seamlessly diffused into the 45,000 fans screaming themselves hoarse in victory. The shot meant a lot more to them than just qualifying; it exorcised the ghosts of the 1992 World Cup when the Kiwis had stumbled in the semis, going down to eventual champion Pakistan.
Elliott’s unbeaten 73-ball 84 was studded with seven fours and three sixes, the last of which was a microcosm of New Zealand's spirited run in the tournament: get a start, then attack, keep attacking and seal it with a flourish. “There was nothing going in my mind when I hit the six. I don’t even know where the ball went,” Elliott, who was named man of the match, said after the knock.
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It was ultimately ironic that the South Africa-born New Zealand all-rounder hit the winning runs to oust the nation of his birth. Elliott finished the World Cup as the second-highest run-getter for New Zealand, with 310 runs from nine matches at a strike rate of 105.44.
An aggressive lower-order batsman, Elliott made his first-class debut for Gauteng in South Africa before moving to New Zealand in 2001. He played five Tests, 83 One-Day Internationals and 17 Twenty20 Internationals for New Zealand.
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