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North Sound (Antigua), July 27 : Chris Gayle
benefited from a huge slice of fortune and marked his return to Tests
with a typically flamboyant half-century to lead a strong West Indies
reply against New Zealand in the first Test here.
The talismanic
opener, playing in his first Test for more than 19 months, was unbeaten
on 85 and Kieran Powell was not out on 58 Thursday when the West Indies
reached 145 without loss, replying to New Zealand's first innings total
of 351 at the close on the second day.
Gayle treated a modest
crowd at the Vivian Richards Cricket Ground to a spectacular volley of
strokes, after Sunil Narine captured 5 for 132 from 43 overs, as New
Zealand's innings folded about an hour-and-quarter after lunch.
Left-hander
Gayle galloped to 36 with strokes all around the wicket before he
fenced a delivery from Bracewell that rose sharply to backward point but
Daniel Flynn put him down.
This failed to deter Gayle and he
reached his 50 from just 39 balls with a single to long-on in the first
over from left-arm spinner Daniel Vettori.
Gayle got into stride immediately with four straight boundaries in the first over of the innings from Chris Martin.
He
dragged the third delivery through mid-on, drove the next delivery
through mid-off, drilled the penultimate delivery straight, and lifted
the final delivery over extra cover.
Gayle also collected three
fours in Neil Wagner's third over, when he swatted a short delivery over
mid-on, drove the fourth delivery on the up past extra cover, and
slashed another short delivery - outside the off-stump - over backward
point from the final delivery of the left-arm fast-medium bowler.
After
he reached his landmark, Gayle slowed down, choosing discretion as the
best part of valour, and he zeroed in on making the occasion grander.
Powell,
a graduate of the West Indies High Performance Centre, remained
unflappable at the other end and arrived at his 50 from 128 balls with a
sweep to the deep fine leg for his eighth boundary.
He looked as
classy as he usually does and drew on the presence of Gayle at the
other end to offer stability to his batting, and continued to pick off
runs each time the New Zealand bowlers fractionally strayed off line or
length.
Earlier, West Indies captain Darren Sammy had continued
the demolition of the New Zealand innings after lunch, when Vettori
miscued a pull at a short, rising ball and was caught at mid-wicket for
17.
Next over, Narine, playing in only his second Test, completed
his five-wicket haul when Kruger van Wyk turned a sharply spun delivery
to forward short leg and was caught for 11.
The West Indies
appeared to have wrapped up the New Zealand innings, when umpire Paul
Reiffel of Australia upheld Narine's lbw appeal over Bracewell.
The
home team players were already trekking off the field, when TV
technology suggested the delivery would have missed the stumps after the
Black Caps' tail-ender reviewed the decision.
The West Indies
bowlers, Sammy in particular, came in for some harsh treatment from
Bracewell, whose 31-ball cameo contained five fours and a pair of sixes
before Shivnarine Chanderpaul held a remarkable catch running back at
deep mid-on to dismiss him off Ravi Rampaul. Rampaul ended with 2-44
from 23.1 overs and Kemar Roach finished with 2-55 from 23 overs.
© IANS
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