In a prevailing presentation, New Zealand bowled out Uganda for a simple 40 runs and pursued down the objective with nine wickets in excess in their T20 World Cup conflict. New Zealand's bowling assault, led by Trent Boult and Tim Southee, left Uganda's unpracticed batsmen battling.


**Early Slaughter from Boult and Southee**


Trent Boult set the vibe with a spell of singing, full inswingers. He began with inswinging yorkers to Ronak Patel, who figured out how to get off strike on the subsequent ball. Boult's resulting conveyances were considerably more deadly. He caught Simon Ssesazi plumb in front and afterward bowled Robinson Obuya with a conveyance that swung in strongly.


Boult's twofold wicket over yielded just a single run, and Southee circled back to a lady over. Boult bowled another lady, leaving Uganda's top request unfit to lay bat on ball. The pair bowled through the powerplay, lessening Uganda to 9 for 3, with Southee catching Alpesh Ramjani LBW in his second finished.



**Spinners and Ferguson Destroy Uganda's Center Order**


Mitchell Santner, Lockie Ferguson, and Rachin Ravindra then dominated, proceeding with the attack. Santner drew an edge from Ronak Patel, which was gotten by wicketkeeper Devon Conway. Ferguson bowled Kenneth Waiswa, and Uganda's center request, including Riazat Ali Shah and Dinesh Nakrani, battled to score.


By the fourteenth over, Uganda was reeling at 27 for 7. Their only encouragement was outperforming their most minimal T20 all out of 39, recorded against West Indies.


**The Chase**


Pursuing 41, New Zealand experienced insignificant obstruction. Uganda's solitary achievement came when Riazat Ali Shah had Finn Allen got down the legside. Regardless of finding the limit just two times in the initial four overs, New Zealand serenely arrived at the objective in 5.2 overs. Devon Conway fixed the success with back to back limits off Juma Miyagi, finishing unbeaten on 22.


This thorough triumph featured New Zealand's bowling ability and highlighted the difficulties Uganda faces at this degree of rivalry.