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Fort Lauderdale( Florida), July 2 : Mystery off-spinner Sunil
Narine burst back to life following a luckless England tour, bamboozling
New Zealand with a four-wicket haul to hand West Indies a 61-run win
and a clean sweep of the Twenty20 International doubleheader here
Sunday.
Regaining the confidence and rhythm that made him the
toast of the Indian Premier League, the right-armer snared four for 12
from four miserly overs as he strangled New Zealand and helped restrict
them to 116 all out off 18.4 overs, reports Caribbean Media Corporation
(CMC).
Opener Chris Gayle had earlier stroked his second
half-century in as many innings to push West Indies up to a competitive
177 for five off their allotted 20 overs, after winning the toss and
opting to bat first at the Central Broward Regional Park Stadium.
The
left-hander was uncharacteristically sedate by his standards in scoring
53 from 39 balls to guide the innings while Johnson Charles got 36 from
32 balls and Dwayne Bravo, a superb 11-ball cameo 35 not out at the
end.
New Zealand, with three changes from Saturday's opening game because of injury, never got their innings off the ground.
Daniel
Flynn, in for his first game, top-scored with 22 from 19 balls while
tail-ender Doug Bracewell smashed two sixes in a busy 11-ball 20 with
defeat already in sight.
Bravo rounded off a fine all-round
performance by taking two for 23 with his medium pace with off-spinner
Marlon Samuels chipping in with two for 25.
For West Indies, it
was the first series win in any format since last October when they
trounced Bangladesh in the Test and ODI series in Dhaka.
West
Indies lost Dwayne Smith again cheaply, whacking two sixes in 13 off
eight balls before top-edging a pull off Bracewell to fall in the second
over with the score on 14.
Gayle and Charles then put on a measured 72 for the second wicket of 61 balls, as they set the innings up for a late assault.
In
contrast to his explosive 85 not out on Saturday, Gayle belted three
fours and four sixes while Charles hit four fours and a six.
Gayle,
voted Man-of-the-Series, laboured for his first 12 runs off 18 balls
but came to life in the eighth over with an enormous six over mid-wicket
and a flick to fine leg for four, in Bracewell's second over that cost
18.
When Charles hoisted slow bowler Rob Nicol to Tim Southee at
short fine leg, Gayle added another 31 for the third wicket with Lendl
Simmons (18) before finally going bowled by off-spinner Nathan McCullum,
the Black Caps best bowler with two for 19.
Simmons followed at
the end of the 16th holing out in the deep, paving the way for Bravo to
dominate proceedings in a 37-run, fifth wicket stand with captain Darren
Sammy (13).
The right-handed Bravo smashed a four and four sixes
in an electrifying innings to ensure the Windies gathered 61 from the
last five overs.
When New Zealand chased, Narine took matters
into his own hands, removing both openers Martin Guptil and Nicol with
successive deliveries in his first over, the fifth of the innings. Guptil
skied to Fidel Edwards at cover for a run-a-ball 18 at 26 for one while
Nicol was deceived by one that left him and was smartly stumped by
Denesh Ramdin for seven.
Stand-in captain Kane Williamson (6) and
Southee (3) fell cheaply to leave the Kiwis tottering on 39 for four in
the eighth and Narine sent them further into the mire when he bowled
Dean Brownlie for one at 43 for five.
Flynn cracked two sixes
before holing out off Samuels in the 13th over at 69 for six and Tom
Latham's busy run-a-ball 19 came to end when he missed a heave at
Samuels and was bowled in the 15th over.
Not to be left out,
Man-of-the-Match Narine collected his fourth wicket in his final over
when Andrew Ellis (1) swung desperately and Bravo pouched a simple catch
down the ground.
Bracewell crashed two consecutive sixes off Samuels in the next over, the 17th, but by then the death throes had already set in.
© IANS
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