The West Indies tasted success for the first time on their New Zealand tour yesterday when they scraped home by two wickets in the first one-day international.
After rolling over New Zealand for a modest 156 in 42.1 overs, the tourists made hard work of reaching their target for the loss of eight wickets in 27.3 overs.
A rollicking unbeaten 43 from Darren Sammy in just 27 balls took the tourists over the line as wickets fell regularly at the other end.
Photo: AFP
When just the last two wickets were left, Sammy knocked off the final 10 runs with a six and a four off Mitchell McClenaghan to be sure of the win.
The victory, no matter how narrow, was a change of fortunes for a side comprehensively outplayed during their 0-2 Test series loss to New Zealand.
“There is some work to do with our batting, but a win is a win and it will ease a lot of pressure on us,” West Indies captain Dwayne Bravo said.
“Darren Sammy is leader of the fielding group and I think the energy in the field was what set the scene for the win for us, and he finished it with the bat,” the skipper said.
Despite the narrow margin at the end, New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum said his side did not deserve to win.
“We kept picking up wickets at key times and in the end it was a pretty close game, but it was a thoroughly deserved win for the West Indies. They outplayed us in all three facets of the game,” McCullum said.
Although the West Indies’ batting remained fragile, the introduction of one-day specialists unleashed a bowling lineup that New Zealand failed to handle on a seam-friendly wicket.
Any confidence New Zealand took from the Tests quickly evaporated when they were sent into bat and faced new arrivals Ravi Rampaul, Dwayne Bravo and Jason Holder.
It was not the return to international cricket that big-hitting opener Jesse Ryder wanted.
He only faced five balls before slashing at a wide Rampaul delivery to be caught by Darren Bravo at cover-point without scoring.
His failure signaled the start of a disappointing batting performance, only redeemed by the McCullum brothers, Brendon (51) and Nathan (47). They contributed 98 of the New Zealand total, with the remaining nine batsmen scoring a total of just 49 runs, with nine extras.
Martin Guptill was trapped leg before wicket by Ravi Rampaul for 2. Ross Taylor, the Test series hero, went for 3, Kane Williamson for 8, Corey Anderson for 13 and Luke Ronchi for 7 as New Zealand slumped to 66-6.
Nathan McCullum and McClenaghan (3 not out) held off the demise as long as they could as they featured in a nine-over stand worth 44 runs for the final wicket.
Bravo returned figures of four for 44, while Rampaul and Holder took two wickets apiece.
What should have been a simple run chase started badly when McClenaghan bowled batsman Kieran Powell (4) in the second over. Like New Zealand, the West Indies top order could not establish a partnership as Johnson Charles (9), Darren Bravo (14) and Dwayne Bravo (12) all fell to McClenaghan, who finished with figures of five for 58.
Lendl Simmons arrested the slide with a positive innings, reaching 34 before he was given out caught by Ross Taylor off Kyle Mills.
Taylor was unsure if he took the ball cleanly and it took several highly magnified replays before the umpires ruled his fingertips were just under the ball.
Narsingh Deonarine (6), Denesh Ramdin (2) and Jason Holder (10) offered little fight, leaving it to Sammy to bring up the winning runs.
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