New Zealand crush West Indies by 186 runs

June 12, 2014 11:27 am | Updated November 17, 2021 04:41 am IST - Kingston (Jamaica)

West Indies captain Denesh Ramdin, left, plays a shot as New Zealand's wicket keeper Brendon McCullum looks on during the second innings on the fourth day of their first cricket Test match in Kingston, Jamaica.

West Indies captain Denesh Ramdin, left, plays a shot as New Zealand's wicket keeper Brendon McCullum looks on during the second innings on the fourth day of their first cricket Test match in Kingston, Jamaica.

West Indies have suffered only their second ever defeat in the Caribbean against New Zealand, a crushing one at that, by 186 runs inside four days in Kingston at the Sabina Park.

Set an improbable 403 for victory, West Indies produced another wretched performance to be dismissed for 216 Wednesday, surrendering meekly inside a session-and-a-half and handing the Black Caps a critical 1-0 lead in the three-Test series, reports CMC.

The defeat was engineered by Man-of-the-Match off-spinner Mark Craig who grabbed four for 97 to follow up a similar four-wicket haul in the first innings, and end his debut Test with outstanding match figures of eight for 188.

Leg-spinner Ish Sodhi supported with three for 42 while seamer Tim Southee again bowled brilliantly to finish with two for 32.

With West Indies tottering on the verge of defeat at 134 for nine, Shane Shillingford and Sulieman Benn threw caution to the wind in a cavalier 85-run last wicket partnership to delay the inevitable.

Shillingford remained unbeaten on 53 off a mere 29 balls, hitting three fours and five sixes, while Benn made 25 from 27 balls, with four fours and a six.

With the last half hour claimed, the pair were three balls away from taking the match into a fifth day when off-spinner Kane Williamson, in his only over of the game, had Benn caught behind giving wicket-keeper Bradley-John Watling his fifth catch of the innings.

Earlier, captain Denesh Ramdin scored 34 and veteran Shiv Chanderpaul, 24, but none of the other batsmen put their hands up, after New Zealand had declared their second innings on 156 for eight, about 40 minutes before tea.

Left with just over half-hour to survive before the interval, the Windies lost opener Chris Gayle for 10 and his partner Kieran Powell, without scoring - both batsmen falling to the irrepressible Southee.

Gayle, as accustomed, started brightly with two consecutive boundaries off the first over from left-arm seamer Trent Boult. The first four, a flick to the mid-wicket boundary, carried him past 7,000 runs in Tests, becoming only the eighth West Indian batsman to achieve the feat.

Things fell apart in the next over, however, when Powell flicked in the air for Tom Latham to take sharp catch at short mid-wicket, set specifically for that stroke.

Two overs later, Gayle followed him, playing back to one angled across him and falling to a catch at the wicket off Southee for the second time in the match.

On 15 for two at the break, West Indies lost Kirk Edwards 20 minutes into the last session for 14, caught at leg gully by James Neesham pushing forward to Craig.

Six overs later, left-handed Darren Bravo (12) reached for one from Craig that turned and bounced and edged behind to Watling and Marlon Samuels lasted just two balls before falling for his second duck of the match, for the first time in his career.

Chanderpaul struck four fours off 35 balls in nearly an hour at the crease and along with Ramdin, provided a glimmer of hope, as they counter-attacked.

Both got off the mark with boundaries, Chanderpaul sweeping Craig and Ramdin driving Southee through the covers, but the revival was short-lived.

Chanderpaul offered no stroke to one that turned back in from Sodhi in the bowler’s second over and was lbw - confirmed by a review - and Kemar Roach scored 19 in adding 49 with his skipper before gloving a leg-side catch off Craig to Watling.

Ramdin was bowled in the next over, playing an inglorious slog at Sodhi and Jerome Taylor’s entertaining 18 off 13 balls, with a four and two sixes, was ended with a superb catch by the keeper as the Jamaican swung at Sodhi.

It was Taylor who had earlier raised the West Indies hopes at the start of the day, when he struck twice in the second over, before the Black Caps had added to their overnight 14 for two.

He squared up nightwatchman Sodhi and struck him on the back leg to gain a clear lbw verdict and off the very next ball, trapped Ross Taylor on the crease, leaving the umpire with little choice.

However, opener Tom Latham who top scored with 73, anchored two critical partnerships to rally the Black Caps. He added 41 for the fifth wicket with captain Brendon McCullum who made 17 before he was bowled through the gate by off-spinner Shillingford (2/39). He then put on a further 63 for the sixth wicket with James Neesham, who made 20.

Overall, the left-handed Latham faced 181 balls, batted a shade over four hours, and struck eight fours, for his second half-century of the game.

Taylor was the pick of the bowlers with three for 28 while fellow new ball partner Kemar Roach finished with two for 12.

Brief scores:

New Zealand 508 for seven decl. (Kane Williamson 113, James Neesham 107, BJ Watling 89, Tom Latham 83, Ross Taylor 55, Tim Southee 21 not out; Sulieman Benn 3/142, Shane Shillingford 3/145) and 156 for eight decl. (Tom Latham 73, BJ Watling 22 not out; Jerome Taylor 3/28, Kemar Roach 2/12, Shane Shillingford 2/39)

West Indies 262 (Shiv Chanderpaul 84 not out, Chris Gayle 64, Denesh Ramdin 39, Kieran Powell 28; Tim Southee 4/19, Mark Craig 4/91) and 216 (Shane Shillingford 53 not out, Denesh Ramdin 34, Sulieman Benn 25; Mark Craig 4/97, Ish Sodhi 3/42, Tim Southee 2/32)

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.