
New Zealand 141 for 4 (Latham 31*, Lawes 3-39) beat West Indies 140 (Carty 48, Lennox 4-52) by six wickets
On the same pitch that was used for the opening game of the series, batting was rarely a simple prospect even if the turn on offer wasn’t quite as lavish as the surface for the previous match.
Will Young and Henry Nicholls played carefully through the powerplay, the latter left grateful for the DRS on two occasions when given lbw against Gudakesh Motie and Alzarri Joseph. But Lawes’ introduction put a different complexion on the chase when he skidded one through to take Nicholls’ off stump with his second delivery.
Mark Chapman was then beaten on the inside edge as he played forward to fall lbw and Young drove a wide delivery to cover to leave New Zealand 77 for 3. Although Lawes still served up the occasional loose delivery – understandable for a 19-year-old in his third professional game – his control has improved markedly even in the short space of time of this series.
The game felt even more in the balance when Daryl Mitchell was beaten by Khary Pierre but the pressure was eased when Lawes returned for his eight over and two full tosses were cashed in on by Latham and Foxcroft. However, had West Indies reviewed for lbw against Foxcroft when he had 9, Lawes would have had a fourth wicket in his final over with 33 still needed. The umpire gave it as a run, and Foxcroft was down the pitch, but replays confirmed there was no edge and it hitting half way up leg stump. From there, New Zealand did not have too many further problems in finishing the job.
West Indies were twice handily placed with the bat before it all fell apart in an almost action-replay of the previous game. Campbell had retired hurt in the sixth over after he collapsed on the ground having sprinted through for a single and was stretchered off, then Ackeem Auguste gave away a promising start when he was brilliantly held by Mitchell Santner running back from mid-off.
Lennox produced a couple of excellent deliveries to bowl Motie and Joseph – particularly the arm ball that curved past Motie’s outside edge – as he turned figures of 1 for 45 after seven overs into 4 for 52 from his 10 with West Indies’ last six wickets falling in 51 balls. They will now need to win both matches in Barbados to claim the series.







