New Zealand wrapped up a win against Sri Lanka by eight wickets yesterday to cap their most successful year in Test cricket.
Set a meager 105-run target on the fourth day of the first Test match in Christchurch, New Zealand, they took 30.4 overs to complete the victory, with Ross Taylor not out 39 and Kane Williamson on 31.
It means New Zealand have won five Tests in a calendar year for the first time after enjoying series wins at home against India (1-0) and away in the West Indies (2-1). They also drew a series with Pakistan (1-1) in the United Arab Emirates earlier this month.
Photo: AFP
New Zealand skipper Brendon McCullum said the platform for victory had been set by scoring 441 in the first innings after losing the toss and being put into bat on a green, bowler-friendly wicket.
“We desperately wanted to bowl, but we found a way with the bat to make a score that was going to be competitive,” McCullum said.
“Then, when you’ve got the seamers that we do have, who are swinging the ball in the air and getting bounce off the wicket, you’re always going to be in with a chance,” he said.
Photo: AFP
Although Williamson and Taylor steered New Zealand home, the victory was built on McCullum’s swashbuckling 195 first-innings knock, and the lethal swing and seam bowling of Trent Boult and Tim Southee.
Sri Lanka captain Angelo Mathews said the game was as good as over on the first day when McCullum cut loose.
“You can’t do much when a guy walks in and gets almost a double hundred in a couple of sessions,” Mathews said.
“It was an unbelievable innings by Brendon. It was one of the best I’ve seen. He was playing like a Twenty20. It was just going all over the park. He was just smashing it and whoever came his way went for a lot of runs,” he said.
After Sri Lanka were forced to follow on 303 runs in arrears of New Zealand’s 441, they ground out a gritty 407, but the size of the first-innings deficit meant New Zealand were never under any serious threat.
Sri Lanka resumed their second innings yesterday on 293-5 and cautiously picked off the 10 runs they needed to make New Zealand bat again, before Southee struck in a high-class spell with an aging ball that produced three wickets for 19.
Sri Lanka slumped to 325-8 and when off-spinner Mark Craig dismissed Prasanna Jayawardene (23) it became 348-9. Only lusty hitting by Shaminda Eranga and Suranga Lakmal, who added 59 for the last wicket, took New Zealand’s target past 100.
Sri Lanka nightwatchman Tharindu Kaushal was Southee’s first victim when he edged a seaming delivery to Craig at second slip.
Angelo Mathews reached 66 before he pulled at a Southee bouncer and was caught down the leg side by wicketkeeper B.J. Watling.
Southee claimed his third wicket of the session when Dhammika Prasad nicked the ball to Taylor at first slip.
Southee featured in the remaining two dismissals, catching Jayawardene (23) off Craig and Lakmal (16) off the bowling of Trent Boult, leaving Eranga undefeated on a career-high 45.
Southee finished with four for 91 and Boult, who removed the top order on Sunday, returned figures of four for 100.
New Zealand lost both openers in their brief run chase, with Tom Latham out for 17 and Hamish Rutherford for 10.
New Zealand had previously won four Tests in a year five times, most recently in 2008.
They are in an unbeatable position in the series with the second and final Test starting in Wellington on Saturday.
Revelations of positive doping tests for nearly two dozen Chinese swimmers that went unpunished sparked an intense flurry of accusations and legal threats between the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) and the head of the US drug-fighting organization, who has long been one of WADA’s fiercest critics. WADA on Saturday said it was turning to legal counsel to address a statement released by US Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) CEO Travis Tygart, who said WADA and anti-doping authorities in China swept positive tests “under the carpet by failing to fairly and evenly follow the global rules that apply to everyone else in the world.” The
Taiwanese judoka Yang Yung-wei on Saturday won silver in the men’s under-60kg category at the Asian Judo Championships in Hong Kong. Nicknamed the “judo heartthrob” in Taiwan, the Olympic silver-medalist missed out on his first Asian Championships gold when he lost to Japanese judoka Taiki Nakamura in the finals. Yang defeated three opponents on Saturday to reach the final after receiving a bye through the round of 32. He first topped Laotian Soukphaxay Sithisane in the round of 16 with two seoi nage (over-the-shoulder throws), then ousted Indian Vijay Kumar Yadav in the quarter-finals with his signature ude hishigi sankaku gatame (triangular armlock). He
RALLY: It was only the second time the Taiwanese has partnered with Kudermetova, and the match seemed tight until they won seven points in a row to take the last set 10-2 Taiwan’s Chan Hao-ching and Russia’s Veronika Kudermetova on Sunday won the Porsche Tennis Grand Prix women’s doubles final in Stuttgart, Germany. The pair defeated Norway’s Ulrikke Eikeri and Estonia’s Ingrid Neel 4-6, 6-3, 10-2 in a tightly contested match at the WTA 500 tournament. Chan and Kudermetova fell 4-6 in the first set after having their serve broken three times, although they played increasingly well. They fought back in the second set and managed to break their opponents’ serve in the eighth game to triumph 6-3. In the tiebreaker, Chan and Kudermetova took a 3-0 lead before their opponents clawed back two points, but
Taiwanese gymnast Lee Chih-kai failed to secure an Olympic berth in the pommel horse following a second-place finish at the last qualifier in Doha on Friday, a performance that Lee and his coach called “unconvincing.” The Tokyo Olympics silver medalist finished runner-up in the final after scoring 6.6 for degree of difficulty and 8.800 for execution for a combined score of 15.400. That was just 0.100 short of Jordan’s Ahmad Abu Al Soud, who had qualified for the event in Paris before the Apparatus World Cup series in Qatar’s capital. After missing the final rounds in the first two of four qualifier