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NAPIER: A century stand by Tim McIntosh and Daniel Flynn put New Zealand in the
box seat as they hunted down the West Indies first innings total of 307 in the
second cricket Test here Saturday.
At stumps on the second day New Zealand were 145 for two, with McIntosh on 62
and Flynn out for 57, requiring a further 163 runs to get their noses in front.
The West Indies first innings was wrapped up in an hour on the second day with a
masterful 126 not out by Shivnarine Chanderpaul providing the backbone of an
undaunting 307 on an easy wicket.
The chief destroyer for New Zealand was Iain O'Brien who finished with career
best figures of six for 75 from 26 overs.
New Zealand's reply started with an early setback when the out-of-form Jamie How
survived two chances before falling for 12, pulling Fidel Edwards straight to
Sewnarine Chattergoon at square leg.
The home side added 101 runs before Edwards claimed the 100th wicket of his Test
career with the caught and bowled dismissal of Flynn for 57.
By tea, McIntosh in only his second Test and Flynn in his ninth raised the score
to a patient 74 for one after 41 overs. The pair lifted the pace to add 63 runs
in 23 overs before Flynn fell in a rain and bad light-disrupted final session.
McIntosh reached his 50 driving West Indies captain Chris Gayle to the boundary,
one of only eight boundaries from the 210 deliveries he has faced.
Although there is promise of spin later in the Test, the McLean Park wicket
remained batsman-friendly through the second day and the visitors' total of 307
appears well within New Zealand's reach.
It was a surprise that most of the West Indies batsmen succumbed so cheaply
while Chanderpaul remained untroubled.
Resuming the day at 258 for six, the West Indies innings lasted just over an
hour and produced a further 49 runs.
O'Brien was New Zealand's star as be bagged his maiden five-wicket haul in Test
cricket, taking the remaining four wickets to fall.
He removed first Test century-maker Jerome Taylor for 17 and Sulieman Benn for a
duck in the same over, and he followed with the wicket of Daren Powell for six,
all caught by wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum.
The pace bowler ended the West Indies innings when he trapped Edwards in front
with a slow yorker.
Chanderpaul was left unbeaten on 126 with his 20th Test century lasting four
hours and 22 minutes and including 11 fours and three sixes.
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