Definitely doing this. 29 - 4 now
Cricket: Official Blackcaps thread the people’s #1
END OF OVER 52
WI: 124/8
CRR: 2.38
Chemar Holder 5 (12)
Joshua Da Silva 2 (12)
Tim Southee 16-6-29-3
Kyle Jamieson 13-4-34-5
6.34pm Stumps Yesterday was 60-40 in New Zealand's favour, but today's 80-20 in their corner. Nicholls got his highest Test score. Wagner hit his first Test fifty. After that Southee took the early wickets, Jamieson took two more, and then when it seemed Blackwood and Brooks were bringing WI back, they struck again with Jamieson finishing the day with a five-for. West Indies need a further 136 to avoid the follow on, with only two wickets in hand. Follow all the post-day coverage on ESPNcricinfo, starting with Karthik's report. If you're joining us from the USA, there's also video highlights you can enjoy on the homepage.
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Perhaps. But NZ tracks are a lot more batsmen-friendly than they used to be, so scoring runs domestically and against very rusty A team attacks has to be taken with a grain of salt. Personally, I doubt that many of those mentioned would cut it at ODI, never mind test, level. I have some confidence with Conway, but much less so with the others.mrbrownstone wrote: Fri Dec 11, 2020 7:15 am You take that every day I reckon after losing the toss. Pitch did plenty, plenty of pace, bounce, seam, and body blows. Think the number of 20-40 scores shows it's a pitch you're never really in on. Another 60-80 tomorrow morning is a very competitive score, anything more a bonus.
Nicholls one of the scratchiest and luckiest hundreds in recent memory, but the runs are on the board and might be just what he needed to play back into form.
Thought Will Young looked promising but he brings his bat down on an angle at times, and both dismissals so far he's been stuck on the crease. A couple of work-ons, but it's so refreshing to be in a position where if everyone's fit Young, Conway, Phillips, Mitchell probably all miss the XI with the likes of Seifert, Cleaver, Chapman, Ravindra, Neesham all floating around doing good things domestically or for NZA. Best batting bench strength I can remember.
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How good is Jamieson? That second wicket was absolutely unplayable. A real find, and genuinely exciting to watch.
He seems to be enjoying himself out there all the time.mrbrownstone wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 7:58 am How good is Jamieson? That second wicket was absolutely unplayable. A real find, and genuinely exciting to watch.
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As well he should. Tall, handy with the bat, decent pace, swings the ball both ways. Makes this test cricket thing look easy so far.Kiwias wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 8:14 amHe seems to be enjoying himself out there all the time.mrbrownstone wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 7:58 am How good is Jamieson? That second wicket was absolutely unplayable. A real find, and genuinely exciting to watch.
Absolutely. He excites the crowd too, making them think all the time that something exciting will happen when he's out there.mrbrownstone wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 8:31 amAs well he should. Tall, handy with the bat, decent pace, swings the ball both ways. Makes this test cricket thing look easy so far.Kiwias wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 8:14 amHe seems to be enjoying himself out there all the time.mrbrownstone wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 7:58 am How good is Jamieson? That second wicket was absolutely unplayable. A real find, and genuinely exciting to watch.
To the manner born.Kiwias wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 8:36 amAbsolutely. He excites the crowd too, making them think all the time that something exciting will happen when he's out there.mrbrownstone wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 8:31 amAs well he should. Tall, handy with the bat, decent pace, swings the ball both ways. Makes this test cricket thing look easy so far.
And with de Grandhomme and Neesham lurking, when will we next see a specialist spinner in the First XI?
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That's an absolute no-brainer. We are fresh, there will never be a better time to enforce the follow on.Jb1981 wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 10:12 pm Southee strikes. You would think that once again we will enforce the follow on. Yesterday wasn’t a big shift and they have had a night to rest.
Absolutely, and they have enforced it.Carter's Choice wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 10:13 pmThat's an absolute no-brainer. We are fresh, there will never be a better time to enforce the follow on.Jb1981 wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 10:12 pm Southee strikes. You would think that once again we will enforce the follow on. Yesterday wasn’t a big shift and they have had a night to rest.
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Yep, they've been shit since the mid to late 1990's. As the game became fully professional and the players became fitter, stronger and more skilled, the WI's have struggled. The West Indies is comprised of small, poor nations and they lack the resources and infrastructure to compete with the likes of Aus, Eng, India, SA and even NZ. When they were at their peak they relied largely on natural talent. In today's era of professionalism, you can't just rely on natural talent.Enzedder wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 10:40 pm Gee, the Windies are incredibly weak batters these days. I grew up with Greenwich, Haynes, Rowe, Richards, Lloyd, Kallicharan and Lara - what the hell happened?
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A 200 run partnership here between Brookes and Campbell would really change the dynamic of this match.
These are all my runs I guess. NZ bowlers are creating chances but Brooks and Campbell are hanging in there.
Huge appeal from Wagner - pitching outside leg for mine.
Balltracking says I am wrong and it would have been out.
Huge appeal from Wagner - pitching outside leg for mine.
Balltracking says I am wrong and it would have been out.
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Did see a documentary where they were going around some of the grounds pointing out a lot of the training facilities were the same that Lloyd etc used. Not in a good connecting with history way, in a this shit hasn't been upgraded for 50 years wayCarter's Choice wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 11:11 pmYep, they've been shit since the mid to late 1990's. As the game became fully professional and the players became fitter, stronger and more skilled, the WI's have struggled. The West Indies is comprised of small, poor nations and they lack the resources and infrastructure to compete with the likes of Aus, Eng, India, SA and even NZ. When they were at their peak they relied largely on natural talent. In today's era of professionalism, you can't just rely on natural talent.Enzedder wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 10:40 pm Gee, the Windies are incredibly weak batters these days. I grew up with Greenwich, Haynes, Rowe, Richards, Lloyd, Kallicharan and Lara - what the hell happened?
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NZ session after a decent but short/futile fightback by the WI's.
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NZ will win this test match today.
After how badly they spanked us last time, I can't help but smile at the thought of how the Aussies will feel about us being Number 1.
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To be fair, how many teams have won series away from home in last 2 years?Gumboot wrote: Sun Dec 13, 2020 3:31 amAfter how badly they spanked us last time, I can't help but smile at the thought of how the Aussies will feel about us being Number 1.
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I did read a few years back that cricket in the Windies is up against the massive budget of US Basketball and just can’t retain the best talent in the face of that.Monkey Magic wrote: Sun Dec 13, 2020 2:14 amDid see a documentary where they were going around some of the grounds pointing out a lot of the training facilities were the same that Lloyd etc used. Not in a good connecting with history way, in a this shit hasn't been upgraded for 50 years wayCarter's Choice wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 11:11 pmYep, they've been shit since the mid to late 1990's. As the game became fully professional and the players became fitter, stronger and more skilled, the WI's have struggled. The West Indies is comprised of small, poor nations and they lack the resources and infrastructure to compete with the likes of Aus, Eng, India, SA and even NZ. When they were at their peak they relied largely on natural talent. In today's era of professionalism, you can't just rely on natural talent.Enzedder wrote: Sat Dec 12, 2020 10:40 pm Gee, the Windies are incredibly weak batters these days. I grew up with Greenwich, Haynes, Rowe, Richards, Lloyd, Kallicharan and Lara - what the hell happened?
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Good thing that's not the only thing the world rankings are judged on then. I know a lot of Kiwis place a high premium on beating Aus (rightly so to an extent), but of our last 13 test series (taking the ongoing series as a forgeone conclusion), we've won 10, lost 2, and drawn 1. Were it not for rain, that lost series against SA would have almost certianly been drawn. We didn't lose a test match in any of those 10 series wins, except for 1 in the UAE. That includes big wins against India when they were ranked No 1, Pakistan in the UAE, a test win in Sri Lanka, a first series win over England in 20 years, and a first series win against Pakistan since 1985. Lots of huge achievements.Gumboot wrote: Sun Dec 13, 2020 3:31 amAfter how badly they spanked us last time, I can't help but smile at the thought of how the Aussies will feel about us being Number 1.
In that same period, Australia have won 5 series, drawn 3, lost 5. Obviously that doesn't tell the complete story (we've only had 3 away series in 13, compared to Australia's 5), but it shows that beating Australia isn't the be all end all.
If we get to number 1 we'd deserve it for consistency over a number of years. Yes, given the drubbing we were handed last year Australia are a better team than us in a head to head in Australia, but ICC rankings aren't a 1 vs 1 battle. If you want to use that argument, we beat India at home, drew in Sri Lanka, won in the UAE, and won outright our last series against England - all things Australia failed to do on their last attempt.
Excellent points. I've been following the BCs from the days of Congdon, Hasting, Burgess, Vivian, Collinge, and Taylor, so it is taking some adjustment to viewing them as genuinely world-class rather than as a team with a couple of star players and a bunch of genuinely hard-working players backing them up.mrbrownstone wrote: Sun Dec 13, 2020 9:12 amGood thing that's not the only thing the world rankings are judged on then. I know a lot of Kiwis place a high premium on beating Aus (rightly so to an extent), but of our last 13 test series (taking the ongoing series as a forgeone conclusion), we've won 10, lost 2, and drawn 1. Were it not for rain, that lost series against SA would have almost certianly been drawn. We didn't lose a test match in any of those 10 series wins, except for 1 in the UAE. That includes big wins against India when they were ranked No 1, Pakistan in the UAE, a test win in Sri Lanka, a first series win over England in 20 years, and a first series win against Pakistan since 1985. Lots of huge achievements.
In that same period, Australia have won 5 series, drawn 3, lost 5. Obviously that doesn't tell the complete story (we've only had 3 away series in 13, compared to Australia's 5), but it shows that beating Australia isn't the be all end all.
If we get to number 1 we'd deserve it for consistency over a number of years. Yes, given the drubbing we were handed last year Australia are a better team than us in a head to head in Australia, but ICC rankings aren't a 1 vs 1 battle. If you want to use that argument, we beat India at home, drew in Sri Lanka, won in the UAE, and won outright our last series against England - all things Australia failed to do on their last attempt.