Put into bat at the Adelaide Oval, Kohli notched up his highest score in this format and put on 134 runs for the third wicket with Suresh Raina (41 runs, 34 balls, 3 fours, 1 six) to dominate the Australian attack.
Opener Rohit Sharma (31 runs, 20 balls, 4 fours, 1 six) set the ball rolling with a four and a six in the first over bowled by Shaun Tait (0-45). Thanks to Rohit, the run-rate shot up easily, with ten-per-over coming easily in the first four overs even as Shikhar Dhawan (5) was out early.
Kohli and Raina came together then, and went about rebuilding the Indian innings. They kept up the tempo initially, taking advantage of the power play overs as the 50 -mark came up in the 6th over.
Indeed for the first nine overs, the Men in Blue were scoring at over eight-per-over, but Watson and Boyce (0-23) had managed to pull things back a bit, despite Kohli hitting out against the leg-spinner.
India had reached the 100-mark in the 13th over and Kohli brought out the big guns thereafter, attacking the bowlers and picking boundaries at ease, thus crossing his highest individual score in T20I cricket.
The 150-mark came up in the 18th over as there was an urgency outlined by both the batsmen. The score read 160 for two at the end of the 18th over. Raina was finally bowled in the final over by James Faulkner (1-43).
(REOPENS DEL 49)
Showing a renewed determination, New Zealand however sailed easily in the middle with Guptill joined by skipper Williamson.
The only blip in Guptill innings was when he went for a lofted shot over mid-on when on 29 with Mishra nearly pulling off a spectacular catch to his wrong side.
Guptill once again got a reprieve with Mishra at the receiving end when he was on 62 as the Indian legspinner failed to judge a high catch on the long-off boundary in what appeared that the afternoon sun obstructed his view.
The Black Caps made three changes to their XI bolstering the spin attack with Ish Sodhi and Anton Devcich to go with Mitchell Santner, while wicketkeeper BJ Watling was included for the first time in the ODI series replacing Luke Ronchi.
Trailing 1-2 in the five-match series, New Zealand must win to keep their hopes alive before heading to the final one-dayer in Visakhapatnam October 29.
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