Resilient West Indies pass the follow-on on the 3rd day of the 3rd test against New Zealand
Kavem Hodge has scored his second test century and played an anchor role for the West Indies who showed resilience with the bat again on the third day of the third test against New Zealand
MOUNT MAUNGANUI, New Zealand (AP) — Kavem Hodge scored his second test century and played an anchor role for the West Indies who showed resilience with the bat again on the third day of the third test against New Zealand.
Hodge was 109 not out at stumps, Anderson Phillip was 12 and the West Indies were 381-6 Saturday, having avoid the follow on as they replied to New Zealand's 575-8.
They achieved that goal, though they were without first test century-maker Shai Hope who has been out of action for the past two days with an unspecified illness.
Hodge made 120 against England at Trent Bridge in July 2024 but had been past 50 only once in the 16 innings between that day and his redemptive innings at Bay Oval on Saturday.
He batted 3 1-2 hours and stalled a little in the 90s before pulling a ball from Michael Rae to reach a century from 224 balls.
“I'm grateful to be honest,” Hodge said. "We always say that a batsman's currency is runs and I'm just happy that I was able to contribute to the team. I've been trying to understand what I will face here in New Zealand and come up with a plan to combat it.”
Hodge struggled to cement his place in the West Indies' team after his maiden century, missed the drawn first test and made 0 and 35 in the second test.
He came to the crease early Saturday after the loss of overnight batter John Campbell in the second over of the day and batted through the rest of the day to rally his team in partnerships of 66 with Tevin Imlach (27), 61 with Alick Athanaze (45) and 81 with Justin Greaves (43).
He played the New Zealand spinners well, often from the back foot and pulled short balls from the pacers crisply through the leg side.
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“One of my strengths is square of the wicket and I was just trying to improve on that, believe in myself and stick to the process,” Hodge said. “Apply your work and work your plan.”
The West Indies showed the same determination replying to New Zealand's mammoth total Saturday that they showed in the second innings of the first test when they batted for 163.3 overs and reached 457-6 after being set 531 to win.
Brandon King made 63 and John Campbell 45 in a 111-run partnership for the first wicket, their first century stand as an opening pair and only the sixth for the West Indies' first wicket in the last 11 years.
Campbell was caught at second slip by Tom Latham, lunging forward to drive a ball from Jacob Duffy that moved enough to catch the outside edge.
King was beaten by a ball from Duffy which swung in late and cannoned off his pads onto his stumps.
Imlach and Athanaze fell between lunch and tea as New Zealand continued to chip away at the West Indies order on a pitch become more and more unresponsive. The pitch showed signs of cracking and plating but only occasionally produced surprising bounce.
Daryl Mitchell and spinner Ajaz Patel bowled well in tandem immediately after tea and removed Greaves and Roston Chase (2) lbw in quick succession. Both reviewed unsuccessfully. Patel's wicket was his 86th in tests but his first in New Zealand.
Shortly before stumps, the West Indies passed 357, the follow-on mark. New Zealand was not expected to enforce the follow-on, having chosen to bat first to avoid the possibility of batting in the fourth innings on a pitch which may turn more over the next two days.
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