Cricket
Associated Press

Duffy helps New Zealand rip through Windies in final Test for 2-0 series victory

1:52pm
New Zealand celebrate the dismissal of Roston Chase at Bay Oval today.

Jacob Duffy has taken 5-42 as New Zealand have beaten the West Indies by 323 runs at Bay Oval in Mount Maunganui to win the third Test and the series 2-0 today.

The seam bowler again played a pivotal role in the Black Caps' victory. A renowned partnership-breaker this series, Duffy claimed the first wicket of the day when dismissing dangerous opener Brandon King for 67 this morning and he wrapped up the final wicket when bowling tail-ender Jayden Seales for a duck this afternoon.

Chasing 462 for an improbable victory, the Windies, who drew the first Test in Christchurch before losing the second in Wellington, were bowled out for 138.

Duffy made the most of the deteriorating wicket which otherwise was more suited to New Zealand's spinners, with the recalled Ajaz Patel taking 3-23 off 32 overs and Glenn Phillips and Rachin Ravindra chipping in with one wicket each.

The victory took New Zealand to second on the ICC world Test championship points table behind Australia.

While Duffy, who took four wickets in the first innings, was New Zealand's man of the final day, Devon Conway was the star of the Test with his 227 runs in the first innings and 100 in the second.

Earlier, overnight batters King and John Campbell frustrated the New Zealand bowlers for the first hour, then four wickets fell in the space of six overs, tipping the match firmly in New Zealand's favour. Another fell just before the interval.

At lunch, West Indies was 99-5, needing 363 runs. New Zealand needed five wickets in the last two sessions.

Rachin Ravindra dives to catch Kavem Hodge off Ajaz Patel's bowling at Bay Oval.

Shai Hope was 2 not out at lunch and captain Roston Chase was unbeaten on 1. There are doubts over whether Kemar Roach will bat because of a hamstring injury.

King and John Campbell resumed this morning with the West Indies 43-0 after being set 461 to win the match. The openers negotiated the last 16 overs on the fourth day and a further 16 overs in the first session before both were dismissed five balls apart.

Duffy made the first breakthrough, dismissing King for his 19th wicket of the series. King had resumed at 37 and reached his second test half-century from 63 balls, looking composed.

He was 67 when Duffy produced a short ball which reared at the batter, who went up on his toes and tried to fend the ball away, succeeding only in popping it off the glove to Glenn Phillips running in from gully.

Campbell faced 105 balls for 16 runs in a dogged defensive effort before hitting out at a ball from Ajaz Patel which found Phillips running back at mid-on.

Kavem Hodge hadn't scored when he was brilliant caught by Rachin Ravindra at short leg off Patel's bowling. New Zealand had been a little defensive in the first hour, not using a leg slip or short leg, but the dismissals of the openers in quick succession brought the field up.

Hodge turned the ball off the inside edge and Ravindra extended his left hand to pull in a good reflex catch. Three wickets had fallen for one run.

Duffy then set up Alick Athanaze (2) with a short ball, then a full ball which the batter tried to drive and edged to wicketkeeper Tom Blundell.

The flurry of wickets upset the trend of batting records in the match. When the opening partnership was broken at 87, the teams were within three runs of breaking the record for the highest cumulative total of runs scored in opening partnerships in a first-class match.

The match was also close to becoming the first since 1960 in which all four opening partnerships exceeded 100 runs.

The third Test between New Zealand and the West Indies is broadcast live and exclusive on TVNZ+ and Duke.

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