Highlights
- Tom Latham scored 252, Devon Conway banked another century.
- Boult scalped 300 Test wickets to becomes 2nd fastest New Zealander to achieve this.
After a dominant batting show to declare the first innings at 521/6, New Zealand wreaked havoc with the ball to bundle Bangladesh for just 126 runs in their first innings during the ongoing second Test at Hagley Oval, Christchurch.
Earlier during the day, Tom Latham scored 252, Devon Conway banked another century and Ross Taylor likely played his last test innings for the Kiwis.
Trent Boult took 5-43, including his 300th test wicket to join Richard Hadlee, Daniel Vettori and his new ball partner Tim Southee among New Zealanders who have taken 300 wickets in tests. The milestone came in Boult’s 75th test at an average of 27.35, along with his ninth five-wicket hauls in Tests.
“It definitely means a lot,” Boult said. “I suppose as a team we’re not about the milestones but it definitely means a lot to join an exclusive club, tough to get a membership.”
Latham declared New Zealand’s first innings halfway through the middle session on day two at Christchurch, and Boult and Southee raced through the Bangladesh top order to leave the tourists’ 11-4 in the seventh over — challenging their test low score of 43.
Yasir Ali showed fortitude to post a maiden test half century and was out for 55 just before stumps.
Latham took two catches at second slip among those four early wickets to keep up his outsized influence on the match which represented a massive shift in fortunes of the series after Bangladesh shocked World Test Champion New Zealand by winning the series-opener by eight wickets.
Latham’s second double century in tests was a mammoth innings which began when he lost the toss Sunday for the sixth time as New Zealand’s stand-in captain. It ended 552 minutes, or 5 1/2 sessions, later after Latham had shared partnerships of 148 for the first wicket with Will Young and 215 for the second wicket with Conway.
Latham ticked off milestones with metronomic regularity — a 50 from 65 balls, his century from 133 deliveries and 150 in 199 balls — before he ended the first day 186 not out.
His shot-making was fluent and varied. When the ball was new and hard and Bangladesh pitched short he peppered the fence behind the point boundary. When the bowling was fuller he drove on the off side or worked the ball through mid-wicket.
He reached his double century from 305 balls early on the second day. But Latham made a rare error when he called his partner through for a quick single just as the pair were regaining momentum and Conway, who looked impregnable, was beaten by a direct hit at the non-striker’s end.
Conway had begun the day 99 not out and admitted to being nervous overnight, but showed none when he took a single from the first ball of the day to reach his third century in five tests. Conway now has 623 runs in nine test innings at an average of 69.22.
His dismissal brought Taylor to the crease for what is likely to be his last innings in test cricket. The 37-year-old batter will retire from tests after this match in which he equals Daniel Vettori’s record of 112 test matches for New Zealand.
Given the position New Zealand is in, there is only a slim chance Taylor will bat again in the match.
He went to the crease amid loud applause, including from the fielding team, and left after making 28 to similar ovation. The next New Zealand batsman, Henry Nicholls, waited in the dressing room to allow to make his final walk from the crease alone, as the only recipient of the crowd’s commendation.
The end of any great career in sport provides a moment of poignancy and shared reflection.
Taylor has been a member of the New Zealand test team for almost 15 years and his acts, which stand among the greats any New Zealand player has achieved, are enmeshed with the memories of all New Zealand cricket fans.
If he doesn’t bat again in this match he will finish with 7,683 test runs, more than any other New Zealander, though that record will likely fall soon to Kane Williamson (7,272).
He has 19 test centuries, second only to Williamson, and is the only New Zealander to have played 100 matches in all three international formats.
His highest score and most memorable innings was his 290 against Australia at Perth in 2015 when he batted for almost 10 hours against one of the world’s best bowling attacks.
- With inputs from AP