'For a lot of games to come out to the last 2-3 balls makes for good watching but just a shame to be on the wrong side.'
New Zealand captain Kane Williamson said though his team played well in the ODI and T20 series and put up a good fight but were not good enough in both the deciding rubbers.
"In both of them (deciders), we were very good, just not quite good enough. Both of them came down to the last couple of balls and when that is the case it's such small margins. On a whole as a group we are trying to constantly improve and we saw that in this series," Williamson said after New Zealand went down by six runs to India in the series deciding third and final T20 International in Thiruvananthapuram on Tuesday.
"As a group, we are trying to constantly improve and get better. We have seen that throughout the series but there is still a long way to go to where we want to be but we are showing very good signs," he added.
The stylish right-handed batsman said the two teams played good competitive cricket but it was disappointing for the visitors to lose so narrowly.
"Such a fine line, especially in white ball cricket. We saw that in the entire series and it was a really tough series where both teams played really good competitive cricket. For a lot of games to come out to the last 2-3 balls makes for good watching but just a shame to be on the wrong side," he said.
The New Zealand skipper praised his players and said Colin Munro and the bowlers, especially the spinners did a great job throughout the series.
Munro was one of the gains of the series as he hit 75 off 62 balls in the third and final ODI at Kanpur and hammered an entertaining century in Rajkot to set up the Kiwis win in the second T20.
"There were some key contributions throughout. Colin Munro in the second game was outstanding. The bowlers, the spinners in particular, were very good. Collectively the guys went about their business really well. The batting unit has a really nice balance to it," Williamson said.
He said the shortened game made it difficult when it came to planning but there is a need to think on one's feet.
"Naturally, when it gets shortened to eight overs, you can sort of plan prior to going out with eight overs and only having to bowl four bowlers. It kind of means that you are not too fluid in how you are going to operate.
"So, the guys coming out were essentially playing death in terms of their batting from ball one. So it was more to do with the surface and what we wanted to finish with today but it's something different because you don't experience it too much, you get 20 overs each and this is something different. You have to think on your feet," he said.
He admitted that the fifth bowler is an issue they were dealing with and also said players are trying to adapt to their roles in the team.
"But we certainly know in some conditions, how effective they can be and we saw Colin de Grandhomme throughout the IPL bowl exceptionally well for Kolkata Knight Riders. It is a balancing act on different surfaces. The batting unit has a really nice balance to it but it is just trying to adapt, read the game the best you can and seeing our bowlers adapt well."
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