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England's David Willey, centre, celebrates with captain Eoin Morgan, right, and Adil Rashid after taking the final New Zealand wicket, that of Mitchell McClenaghan for 0, as England win the International Twenty20 cricket match between England and New Zealand at Old Trafford cricket ground in Manchester, England, Tuesday, June 23, 2015. Image Credit: AP

Manchester, United Kingdom: England limited overs captain Eoin Morgan said the national side had shown they “could beat the best in the world in any game of cricket” after ensuring New Zealand’s tour ended on a losing note.

Having defeated New Zealand — who thrashed England by eight wickets at Wellington in February en route to the World Cup final — 3-2 in a thrilling One Day International series, Morgan’s men inflicted a 56-run thrashing upon the Black Caps in Tuesday’s tour-ending Twenty20 international at Old Trafford.

“This felt a million miles away after the World Cup,” said Morgan of a global tournament where England suffered a humiliating first-round exit without beating a single rival Test nation.

“This is a fantastic way to finish what has been a great month of cricket.

“When you’re trying to implement change within a group, it’s important to have successes along the way and these guys have had that.

“We’ve done it the way we said we would and that’s important too. I want these guys to play with as much freedom as possible.”

For England, who shared a two-match Test series 1-1 with New Zealand earlier in the season, Tuesday’s win was an ideal way to sign off before they begin their bid to regain the Ashes from Australia next month.

“Now we have won this game and the ODI series it reinforces to the guys that, it might not always come off, but we can beat the best in the world in any game of cricket,” said Morgan, not currently in England’s Test side.

By contrast, at the age of just 24, Yorkshire batsman Joe Root, who top scored in the T20 game with 68, is now an England mainstay in all three international formats.

“Joe has been outstanding again,” said Morgan. “Although he’s still very young he’s a very senior player in our squad and the guys don’t have to look very far for the ultimate professional in the way he goes about his business.”

Root said he was enjoying England’s increasingly bold approach, even if he could not quite understand how it had come about.

“It’s hard to explain, everyone has gone out this summer with a freedom and it’s really refreshing to see everyone commit to it and absolutely go for it,” Root told Sky Sports.

For New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum, whose typically rapid 35 off 15 balls gave the crowd a taste of what they can expect when he returns to Old Trafford on Friday with Warwickshire for a Twenty20 county match against Lancashire, it was a desperately disappointing end to what had otherwise been a closely contested tour.

“Some of our batting was pretty amateurish,” McCullum said. “We got ourselves in a good position and we should have been able to chase down the total.

“Credit to England, they put us under pressure and looked for wickets as they have done throughout the series and they were able to get hold of them.”

—AFP