New Zealand inflicts innings defeat on West Indies, clinches series

Tom Latham' side beats West Indies by an innings and 12 runs to take the two-Test series 2-0.

Published : Dec 14, 2020 08:45 IST

Jason Holder is dismissed bowled in the first session on Day Four at the Basin Reserve. - AP
Jason Holder is dismissed bowled in the first session on Day Four at the Basin Reserve. - AP
lightbox-info

Jason Holder is dismissed bowled in the first session on Day Four at the Basin Reserve. - AP

New Zealand took a little over an hour to wrap up a comprehensive innings and 12 runs victory in the second Test against West Indies on the fourth day at the Basin Reserve on Monday to seal a 2-0 series sweep.

Scorecard and ball-by-ball updates

The visiting team resumed on 244 for 6 with captain Jason Holder on 60 and Joshua Da Silva on 25 but was dismissed for 317 midway through the first session, still 12 runs from making the home team bat again after it scored 460 in its first innings.

New Zealand dismissed West Indies for 131 in its first innings early on Sunday and captain Tom Latham had little hesitation in enforcing the follow on.

New Zealand also won the first Test in Hamilton by an innings and 134 runs.

The victory put the side level with Australia on 116 points at the top of the International Cricket Council Test rankings and it moved to third in the table for the World Test Championship final at Lord's next year.

“Clinical is probably the word to use,” Latham told reporters.

“The way we were able to set the game with the bat on the back of Henry's innings was outstanding.

“On the back of that ...to put a team back in twice in two matches was not going to be easy for the bowlers ... but they kept coming time and again and did the job with the ball. So, yeah, clinical is a good word for it.”

The start of play on Monday was delayed for 20 minutes due to light rain falling in central Wellington but Tim Southee and Neil Wagner picked up the four wickets required, while Da Silva scored his first Test half-century.

“When we batted in the first innings we didn't set up the game very well,” Holder told reporters as to why his side had lost the game.

“We always say the first innings is really important to set the match up and we didn't do that in this Test match.”

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

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