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Kingston (Jamaica), July 9 : Desperate New Zealand have placed a large bounty on the head of in-form West Indies opener Chris Gayle.
They
believe getting the big-hitting left-hander cheaply will be the key to
breaking their winless run against the Caribbean side.
"We firmly
believe that if we get Gayle early we've got a very good chance of
running through the rest of them and getting a score that we can chase
down," seamer Tim Southee was quoted as saying by Caribbean Media
Corporation.
"There's a few of their guys that haven't actually
had a lot of batting, so if we can get a couple of early wickets then
I'm sure we can make the most of that."
Gayle has blasted a
century and three half-centuries in his four innings against the Black
Caps, and has been at the centre of the Windies domination.
He
stroked an unbeaten 85 and 53 in the two Twenty20 Internationals in
Florida last weekend which the West Indies won easily, and hit an
unbeaten 63 in the first One-Day International Thursday that the hosts
won by nine wickets.
Saturday, he carved out his 20th one-day
century with a masterful 125 as the West Indies took a 2-0 lead in the
five match series with a 55-run verdict.
"The first 10 balls we
bowl to him are crucial. He tends to have a look and sort of set
himself. He's a little bit vulnerable early doors, and we just need to
come up with a plan now to do it," said the 23-year-old right-armer.
"If
we can work on the first couple of overs to him and stick to the plans a
bit more, then hopefully we can put some pressure on him."
New
Zealand head to St. Kitts Sunday for the final three games of the
series, knowing that another loss in Wednesday's third match at Warner
Park will hand the West Indies the series.
Southee said despite
Saturday's defeat, there were signs that the tourists were coming into
their own. He said they were still confident of winning the last three
matches and taking the series.
"The batting was an improvement. It's just now we need a couple of guys that get in, to go on and get big scores," he noted.
"We've
still got a series to win and we firmly believe we can do that. We've
got three games left and it's going to take a massive effort."
© IANS
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