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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
Sport
Angus Fontaine and James Wallace

Australia beat New Zealand by three wickets to win the second Test – as it happened

Australia’s Pat Cummins and Alex Carey celebrate
Australia’s Pat Cummins and Alex Carey celebrate victory on day four of the second Test against New Zealand in Christchurch. Photograph: Kai Schwörer/Getty Images

That just about wraps it up, folks. Cheers for your company today, throughout the four, feisty days of this Test and over the course of a fantastic series played in wonderful spirit. If you chimed into our over-by-over coverage at any stage of this Australian summer, you have our sincere thanks. Our match report will land imminently and Geoff Lemon’s appraisal of this epic series is also on the near horizon. Over and out!

Pat Cummins has his big mitts on the Trans-Tasman Trophy for the first time as captain and a huge smile on his dial. “It was pretty tense,” laughs the Australian skipper. “Pretty nervous for the last couple of hours. Amazing win. The boys were fantastic today.”

Asked about his decision to crash the winning runs rather than let Alex Carey bring up his second Test century, Cummins pleads ignorance. “I had no idea he was on 98!”

Innately modest, Cummins says “the toss helped” in what he believes was “a funny old Test match – Day One moved really quickly, then the pitch flattened out. We’ve been on the other side of it plenty of time and if the scoreboard’s not moving you feel in the game. But if they are chipping away, it feels like it’s happening pretty quickly.”

When he came to the crease Australia were wobbling after losing two wickets in two balls and still needed 54 runs for victory. “Our goal today was to be busy, keep the run rate ticking over and bit by bit get closer,” explains Cummins. “We’ve got quite an experienced side and we’ve had a bit of success along the way. Here, I think the story of this series was: in key moments one guy stood up and made themselves a matchwinner.

“We keep finding ways to win. It’s a pretty awesome squad.”

Updated

New Zealand captain Tim Southee is devastated but philosophical: “It ended up being a great Test,” says the skipper, who took one wicket in each innings. “The partnership with Mitch Marsh and Alex Carey broke the back of our attack. But it was an exciting end to the day. When you are playing the No 1 side you need to go that little bit further. The Test ebbed and flowed throughout the whole match.”

Southee was rueful about missed opportunities, with Rachin Ravindra’s fumble of Mitch Marsh from Southee’s first ball of the day leaving him particularly salty. “No one means to drop catches,” shrugs the skipper with a wince. “But when you are playing against the best you have to be a bit better for longer.”

The positives? “Matt Henry has gone from strength to strength.”

Black Caps tyro Matt Henry has won Player of the Series for his 17 wickets across the series. “It’s disappointing,” says a downcast Henry. “But we showed a lot of fight out there. The attitude were brought to keep coming in, the way Ben Sears went about his work, to really crack an end open was brilliant… but it wasn’t meant to be.”

Today’s hero Alex Carey has been awarded Player of the Match for his unbeaten 98 and 10 catches. “It was a great series,” grins the keeper. “This game ebbed and flowed. Our backs were against the wall this morning...so it was nice to chase those runs down. The ball was nipping around. I thought Mitch Marsh’s intent was outstanding. He got us going. The messaging was, let’s play our way. Mitch’s innings was brilliant.”

Updated

Australia have won the second Test by three wickets

What a win for the boys in the baggy green caps! New Zealand slump, shattered at missing their chance to inflict a first home victory in 31 years on their big brothers. But led by Alex Carey’s epic unbeaten 98, Mitchell Marsh’s muscular eighty and Pat Cummins’ nerveless 32 at the death, the Australians have won the Test and taken the series 2-0.

The Test itself was a classic, as each side snatched back the ascendancy. The Black Caps tried to the last and young debutant fastbowler Ben Sears gave them an almighty sniff when he ripped out Mitchells Marsh and Starc in two sizzling deliveries. But in the end the calm of Cummins and the craft of Carey won the day.

In the end, Australia held their nerve to canter home. But they had to get a massive monkey off their back to do it. In their last 16 chases of 280+ the Australians have won only once – when Cummins and Lyon got them home at Edgbaston in 2023.

Now they’ve done it again to ice an imperious 12 months of cricket in which they beat England to retain the Ashes, defeated West Indies to keep the Frank Worrell Trophy, pumped Pakistan at home, swept away India to take the ICC World Test Championship and walloped all comers in the ODI World Cup. Now they’ve swept the Black Caps 2-zip and can go into the Test winter very proud.

Updated

65th over: Australia 277-7 (Carey 98, Cummins 32) AUSTRALIA WIN! Sears throws down the stumps but Cummins is safe within the batting crease. Inside edge on the fifth but it’s straight into the turf. Not this one though! Cummins crashes it through midwicket for a lovely four and that is victory for Australia by three wickets!

65th over: Australia 277-7 (Carey 98, Cummins 28) AUSTRALIA NEED 2 TO WIN. CRACK! goes Carey. Over the top the keeper goes and it’s another four. Three runs to win and three figures in sight for Alex Carey. One shot away… but Sears slings a spiteful delivery back of a length and it strikes Carey on the body. They run anyway. Two to win.

64th over: Australia 272-7 (Carey 93, Cummins 28) AUSTRALIA NEED 7 TO WIN. Last roll of the dice time for New Zealand. Black Caps captain Tim Southee calls in his strike bowler Matt Henry to bring it home. The lights come on at Hagley Oval and Carey gets an educated edge to the first delivery and steals four through slips. He’s into the 90s! Surely Southee has to crowd the Australian batters now. Instead Carey drives hard and only a hasty Henry hoof stops four down the ground. The Australians run a risky single anyway and Carey dives to make his ground. And BANG! Cummins straight drives Henry down the ground for an ice-cold four. Australia are seven runs away.

63rd over: Australia 263-7 (Carey 88, Cummins 24) AUSTRALIA NEED 16 TO WIN. Southee gives his young firebrand another over. Sears to Cummins but it’s short again and Captain Pat cuts for an easy single. Carey swivels on the second ball, a nervous no-ball from the debutant, to takes two off the target. Sears digs the next one in short and straight and catches Cummins hopping. But soft hands and a high elbow help drop it short of the fielder in close. Another bouncer, easily evaded by the Australian skipper. Nathan Lyon and Josh Hazlewood are sweating bullets in the pavillion. But that helps! Cummins craftily cracks it fine and takes off. Great running by Carey turns it into three. And a single from the last takes Australia to within 16 of victory.

Updated

62nd over: Australia 256-7 (Carey 86, Cummins 20) AUSTRALIA NEED 23 TO WIN. There’s a pause for drinks. Strewth, I could do with a slug of something strong myself. But there’s work to do. Australia still have their noses in front here but New Zealand, seeking their first victory at home over their Anzac frenemy in 31 years, are charging hard. Here we go again and Carey sweeps beautifully for four first ball after drinks! Lovely control by Carey. It scythed along the Hagley Oval surface the entire way. Now he sweeps again and it’s another four! Clever by Carey. He just paddled Phillips around the corner calm as you like and it ran to fine leg. What an innings this is by the keeper. What a Test! But is there a twist or two to come?

61st over: Australia 248-7 (Carey 78, Cummins 20) AUSTRALIA NEED 31 TO WIN. Cut for four! Lovely shot by Cummins. Sears put it just outside the channel and the Australian captain guided it beautifully through the infield and all the way to the rope. There’s greater heat on the sequel delivery – Sears is up to 143kph and the extra effort sees him stumble in his follow-through. Cummins calmly swats another single from the third. Now Carey gets a look and immediately gets over the top of a lifter for a run. Cummins clips another two fine. It was almost four but the fielder at fine leg made good ground to stop it before the rope. Eight from the over!

Updated

60th over: Australia 240-7 (Carey 77, Cummins 13) AUSTRALIA NEED 39 TO WIN. Phillips to Cummins. You could hear a pin drop at Hagley Oval. The only sound audible is the yelp of the keeper’s “Bowled GP!”, the crunch of feet on turf and bat on ball. Cummins fends the first four and steps out to drive the fifth. No run. He gets a single from the final ball though to take the target under 40

59th over: Australia 239-7 (Carey 77, Cummins 12) AUSTRALIA NEED 40 TO WIN. Ramp shot! That was audacious from Carey. Sears thumped it in short and wide and Carey simply reached out and tapped it over the top for a lovely enterprising boundary. Another ramp to the third and this one is almost caught! Phillips may have got a fingernail on that one as he leapt over a metre off the ground to reel it in. Instead it becomes the most dramatic of singles. Cummins shuffles across to Sears and works a run from the fifth.

Updated

58th over: Australia 233-7 (Carey 72, Cummins 11) AUSTRALIA NEED 46 TO WIN. Glenn Phillips enters his 10th over. At age 27 he’s only played a handful of Tests and he’s ostensibly a batter but he’s certainly doing a great job for his skipper with the ball today – and has done all series. He leaks two on the final delivery though. Cummins got it fine and Carey ran like a jackrabbit to make it a double.

57th over: Australia 231-7 (Carey 72, Cummins 9) AUSTRALIA NEED 48 TO WIN. Ben Sears is back to Carey who takes a single from the first. With two wickets in two balls from his last over and figures of 4-58 the young debutant has the crazy eyes on. Speed gun has ticked over 140kph and Cummins is hopping around the crease trying to tamp the ball outside the reach of that man in close. He squirts a single fine and now Carey works another run off his hip to take the target under 50. Cummins clips a full ball for another run from the last.

Updated

56th over: Australia 227-7 (Carey 71, Cummins 7) AUSTRALIA NEED 52 TO WIN. Southee and Phillips are making Pat Cummins sweat now, moving the field inch by inch. Finally we enter the fray, Cummins lunging forward to defuse the first then inside edging the second. Almost a catch to short leg from the third. Nice fend to the fourth. Can Cummins do what he did with Nathan Lyon at Edgbaston last year? He taps two and runs well to make it. Cool stuff from the captain.

55th over: Australia 225-7 (Carey 71, Cummins 5) AUSTRALIA NEED 54 TO WIN. Edged… but safe! That was streaky by new batter Pat Cummins but he gets away with it. Ben Sears was within a foot of a hat-trick there. Cummins turns the last delivery away for a single to retain stroke. Huge over for New Zealand. The crowd are back in this game and the Test is back on a knife’s edge!

Updated

WICKET! Starc c Young b Sears 0 (Australia 220-7)

Starc gone first ball! Sears on a hat-trick!! He just chipped it to midwicket and Will Young poiuched the easiest of catches.

WICKET! Marsh lbw Sears 80 (Australia 220-6)

What a twist! Marsh is gone and the Black Caps are back in it. That looked legside for all money but Erasmus, in his final Test as a standing umpire, pointed to the sky and he’s been proven right. Huge wicket for the debutant Sears.

55th over: Australia 220-5 (Marsh 80, Carey 71) Ben Sears is into the attack and Marsh tries to cut him over the infield and misses. Big appeal now for lbw but that looked down leg for mine. Umpire Marais Erasmus has shot the finger up though… so we will go to the tape. No bat on it… but is it missing? No it isn’t!

54th over: Australia 220-5 (Marsh 80, Carey 71) Australia are accelerating toward this target and now Carey pushes handsomely at Henry’s second ball and takes another two. Henry attempts a riposte via a short ball but it’s only 131kph and Carey swivels and whips it off his eyebrows to the fence in a flash. Great shot! That takes Carey to his highest-ever second innings score for Australia. Target is now 59 runs to win.

Updated

53rd over: Australia 213-5 (Marsh 79, Carey 65) Phillips tries to rush one onto Carey but the keeper steps back and cuts fine for a single. Carey has looked excellent from the get-go today. He took the initiative away from the home side after the fall of Head and has rattled the run rate along at over five. Lots of luxurious ground strokes, plenty of fast-run singles – each as damaging and deflating to the Kiwis as the last

52nd over: Australia 211-5 (Marsh 78, Carey 64) Henry is running in hard but questions are being asked why Southee didn’t open with his strike bowler straight after lunch. Australia look very settled. Marsh taps deftly onto the offside and steals a single. Carey rolls his wrists on the fifth to take another and reduce the chase target to 68. It’s been 26 overs since the Black Caps took a wicket.

51st over: Australia 209-5 (Marsh 77, Carey 63) Another great call by James Wallace earlier, thanks Jim. He’s teed me – and Australia – up nicely. Phillips is back for a seventh over and he’s looked dangerous in every one of them. Carey gets into a nice crouch to fend off the first few. He tries to cut the last – risky! – but Southee has that pocket packed with fielders and there’s no run. A maiden.

Updated

50th over: Australia 209-5 (Marsh 77, Carey 63) Big lbw appeal straight up! Matt Henry, like Pat Cummins, has made a habit of striking with the first ball of a spell. No review here though given the Black Caps only have one left. And just as well as replays show an inside edge from Alex Carey. He takes a single from the next and Marsh heaves at the third but it’s only a single but it brings up 2000 Test runs for Mitchell Marsh. Not a bad return from 42 Tests. He’s brought ‘em up at an average over 30 with three centuries in the mix. Ouch! Henry strays onto Carey’s pads and gets glanced for four. And now it gets worse ffor th homne side as Marsh swipes Henry for six over square leg. 16 from the over and suddenly Australia only need 70 for victory.

Righto, that is me done. Angus Fontaine is here to take you through to the end of this match. Is there a sting in the ale tail yet? Thanks for your company, goodbye!

49th over: Australia 193-5 (Marsh 56, Carey 55)Phillips nearly gets Carey, a quicker ball passes so close to the edge it makes keeper Tom Blundell groan and fall to his knees upon taking it behind the stumps. A maiden from the burly tweaker.

48th over: Australia 193-5 (Marsh 69, Carey 55) Clobbered! Southee loses his line and Marsh cashes in! Ten runs off the over including two boundaries thrashed away into the off side. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again… New Zealand need a wicket ten overs ago pronto.

47th over: Australia 183-5 (Marsh 59, Carey 55) Phillips is varying his pace and flight. Marsh uses his feet to get down the track and gets a meaty edge that flies down to third, they come back for three. The target is ticking down, down, deeper and down. 96 needed now for Australia.

46th over: Australia 180-5 (Marsh 56, Carey 55) Southee is picked off for a single each by Marsh and Carey. The hundred partnership comes up between this pair. It’s looking like a match winning one at the moment.

45th over: Australia 178-5 (Marsh 55, Carey 54) Phillips bustles in. He’s got a tight and tidy action and he gets through it with a flourish and a grunt at the crease. Tosses it up, Carey tries to slap it away but with no timing. A full bunger is pushed down the ground for an easy single. Marsh blocks out the final delivery.

44th over: Australia 177-5 (Marsh 55, Carey 53) Tim Southee starts off the afternoon session. His side looked ragged before the interval, they need to strike early here if Australia aren’t going to chase these runs down at a canter. Carey picks up three singles to continue his highly effective innings. Glenn Phillips is going to bowl from the other end, a good option this for New Zealand.

Updated

New Zealand will likely not get a second new ball, Glenn Phillips’ spin could well be their best chance of getting a breakthrough. He looked dangerous in his one over before lunch. The players are heading out onto the turf of the Hagley Oval.

Time to raid the fridge for a post midnight snack. Back soon!

A very handy cameo from Alex Carey. He’ll resume after lunch too.

Lunch: Australia 174-5 ( Aus require 105 runs to win)

Glenn Phillips to bowl an over of spin before lunch. A slip and short leg in place. Big edge! Marsh comes down the track to play a booming drive, the ball flying off a thick edge and away for four!

New Zealand REVIEW for an LBW off Marsh! Has he trapped this? Or just missed a dipping full toss? NOT OUT. The faintest tickle saves Marsh. Australia head to lunch needing 105 more runs to win.

19 overs have yielded 97 runs for Australia this morning and just the one wicket for New Zealand. Even more disconcerting for Tim Southee is the run rate, the visitors have been rollocking along at 5.11 runs an over with Marsh and Carey playing positively, looking more comfortable and dangerous with each over that passes. This ain’t no nervous chase at the moment.

43rd over: Australia 174-5 (Marsh 55, Carey 50)

Updated

42nd over: Australia 170-5 (Marsh 51, Carey 50) New Zealand are leaking runs here in the run up towards lunch, they might be very glad to get off the park and regroup in a few minutes. Sears is edged for four by Carey who then crunches to the point fence off the very next ball. Carey picks up another couple of twos to go to a very useful fifty off just 61 balls. Australia are ending the session in dominant style.

41st over: Australia 158-5 (Marsh 51, Carey 38) Kuggeleijn is going to get his Neil Wagner on here and send down a barrage of short stuff. Hmmm – a dodgy start to the bouncer campaign as one flies way wide and over both batter and Blundell and away for four byes. Two more leg byes off Marsh’s rump and then off the final ball of the over another short ball clips Mitch Marsh on the back and runs away for another four. Marsh was taking evasive action so the runs count. What a weird over – a maiden that cost New Zealand ten runs.

40th over: Australia 148-5 (Marsh 51, Carey 38) Sears tightens things up and gets a bit of control back for Tim Southee. A maiden blocked out by Alex Carey.

39th over: Australia 148-5 (Marsh 51, Carey 38) Kuggeleijn spears one down the leg side – Blundell can only get a finger on it behind the stumps and it runs away for four. Shot! Carey stands tall and punches off the back foot for four more. New Zealand beginning to leak runs through Sears and Kuggeleijn. Crack! Marsh pulls a short ball for four more to move to fifty*. Thirteen runs off the over as well as a burned review as the Kiwis thought Carey had tickled an upper cut behind but it was his helmet grille creaking at the crucial moment. The target is reduced to 131 runs, there have been 47 runs scored in the last ten overs and crucially, nada/nowt/zilch/diddly squat in the wickets column.

*Penny for Rachin Ravindra’s thoughts right now. He shelled Marsh when he was on 28.

Updated

38th over: Australia 135-5 (Marsh 47, Carey 33) Sears does replace Henry. Blue skies abundant now in Christchurch. Beaten! Sears is full and draws Carey into the drive, very close to nicking off. Another good ball from Sears sees Carey get a meaty edge wide of the cordon and away for four. That’s the 50 partnership for Marsh and Carey. Runs coming steadily.

37th over: Australia 128-5 (Marsh 45, Carey 28) Scott Kuggeleijn into the attack. Maybe a change of ends for Ben Sears. A leg bye and a quick single to Carey. The partnership is officially into ‘worrisome’ for the Kiwis now.

Updated

36th over: Australia 126-5 (Marsh 45, Carey 27) Carey tucks for two into the leg side. “Negative Nigel that I am” writes Ben Bernards, “I had New Zealand to take three more wickets in good time (say, before the dastardly canary yellows reach 170) only for a combination of Cummins and Starc to blast Australia home with a partnership of 100-odd at a run a ball. As Rachin spilled Marsh earlier I adjusted my prediction to ‘Marsh scores 160 not out’ instead. Hold me.”

Hold me in your arms, may they keep me
Sing me a lullaby, ‘cause I’m sleepy

35th over: Australia 123-5 (Marsh 45, Carey 25) Sears starts them off again after a quick slurp of something luminous. He really reminds me of the young fella from Manchester by the Sea. Sad film. Exciting bowler. A loose ball is picked off the hip from Carey for four to fine leg. A couple more are collected down the ground. Australia ticking along at 3.5 runs an over, 156 more runs needed for them. Five wickets for New Zealand. All set for an arse nipper?

Close but no watermelon vape:

34th over: Australia 116-5 (Marsh 44, Carey 19) Carey survives and it is time for a drink. A breathless 45 minutes of play this morning. A drop, a wicket, a near chop on, a flurry of boundaries and an LBW overturned. Time for a drink.

REVIEW: NOT OUT! The ball was missing the leg stump by a whisker so the decision is reversed. Henry can’t believe it – he was sure he had his man there. Good review from Australia, they can’t afford to lose another before the lunch break.

Updated

Matt Henry has trapped Alex Carey in front and the finger has gone up! Carey has reviewed but does not look confident…

33rd over: Australia 112-5 (Marsh 44, Carey 15) Ben Sears replaces Matt Henry. The debutant bowled brilliantly last evening and has Marnus and Cam Green in his back pocket to show for it. Bounce! First ball from Sears climbs nastily and thuds into Carey’s glove as he tries to ride the steepling delivery. Carey gets off strike the next ball. Marsh is then beaten by a beauty that climbs and moves late. The next ball is cut away through the off side for three runs, good tussle this between bat and ball.

32nd over: Australia 107-5 (Marsh 41, Carey 14) Southee continues, sun burning off the clouds now in Christchurch. Eeeeesht! Marsh very nearly chops on to his stumps! How has that missed? Forcing away from his body, the inside edge hit his back pad and dribbles an inch wide of off stump. It’s not been a dull morning – much more watchable that the Oscars I reckon.

31st over: Australia 106-5 (Marsh 41, Carey 13) Carey nudges a single to bring Marsh on strike. Bosh. Marsh leans back and cuts away uppishly for four. The exact same shot that he slapped to Ravindra who shelled the chance a few overs ago, this time the ball is safely in the gap and away to the advertising hoardings in a flash.

30th over: Australia 101-5 (Marsh 37, Carey 12) Marsh drives down the ground but plinks it off the inner half of the bat. The ball goes straight back past Tim Southee and if the bowler had got a glance on it onto the stumps then Alex Carey was toast, he was so far out of his crease when the ball passed by. Three runs collected and the hundred up for Australia. 178 more runs still needed, one of these two batters is going to have to get a biggun.

29th over: Australia 97-5 (Marsh 34, Carey 11) Mitch Marsh and Alex Carey aren’t going to stodge this out. Both men like to play their shots and flash hard while they are at it. Case in point – Henry pitches one up and Carey flays away over the slips for four.

28th over: Australia 92-5 (Marsh 34, Carey 7) Shot! Carey pounces on a full ball and drives all along the carpet for four. He hit that hard, some nervous energy fizzing through the hands no doubt. Southee hangs the next few outside off stump but Carey isn’t interested in them. He pays them never-mind, go away. Two more runs collected off the final ball of the over as Carey glides past point.

27th over: Australia 86-5 (Marsh 34, Carey 1) Edge! Safe. Four. Marsh defends on the front foot to Henry and the ball takes the outside edge, it is always headed downwards however and flies wide of third slip and away to the rope. Every single run crucial. Marsh drives into cover for a single and Carey gets off the mark with a push down the ground. How’re your nerves?

Updated

26th over: Australia 80-5 (Marsh 28, Carey 0) What a start. Worth the wait eh? If you are a Kiwi fan that is… Alex Carey is the new batter for Australia, heaps of pressure on his shoulders. The wily Southee keeps him honest with three dot balls on a good length outside off.

WICKET! Head c Young b Southee 18 (Australia 80-5)

Head goes in mirror image fashion the very next ball! Tim Southee serves up another back of a length delivery and Head throws his hands at it – the ball arrowing straight into the chest of Will Young at point. This time the catch is taken and New Zealand have an early scalp – the dangerous Travis Head is toppled!

Updated

Rachin Ravindra has DROPPED Mitch Marsh! Straight at him at backward point and the youngster fumbles it into the turf.

25th over: Australia 78-4 (Marsh 28, Head 19) Matt Henry is going to start with the ball. He’s been excellent in both Test matches, can he get his side over the line today? Travis Head drops the ball into the leg side for the first run of the day. Henry has three slips and a gully in place. Mitch Marsh takes a step down the pitch and plays a back of a length ball square of the wicket for a scampered single. Watery sunshine now peeping through at the Hagley Oval. Lovely.

Righto, players emerging at the Hagley Oval. The Kiwis are in a huddle on the boundary edge, Marsh and Head are doing some final limbering up. Let’s have some play, shall we?

“I just wondered whether you have any thoughts as to which, if either team will be better pleased by the rain delay? asks Geoff Wignall.

I always think a wet ball is pretty ‘orrible to bowl with and doesn’t do as much in the air or off the pitch… but then again a soggy outfield means less value for your shots as a batter. I actually think neither side will be too bothered though, these guys are pros goddammit.

“Looking forward to seeing some South Australians rescuing the day here Jim” says Eamonn Maloney. “Brief panic at the mention of Mother’s Day, relief to find it remains 12 May for the participants of this Test and their supporting parties”

Arf. Sorry for causing antipodean panic! Saved Carl Jepson’s expat bacon though by the sounds of it:

“Morning James, thanks for the heads up on UK Mother’s day because living in Australia I sometimes miss the notice. Back in the will.

I’m imagining those last four words being said exactly like this:

Here are the revised playing times: (All in local time)

First Session 12pm-1.30pm (12.45pm drinks)

Second Session 2.10pm-4.40pm (3.25 drinks)

Third Session 5pm-7pm (6pm drinks)

You can even time your loo/brew breaks as per the above.

Weather Update – and it is good news!*

The rain has stopped and the clean up is underway. If the sky behaves from now on then we’ll have play in a little over 30 minutes.

*Unless you are a MASSIVE fan of interminable live-blogging?

Oh and here’s summink what I wrote about the incredible origin story of Yashasvi Jaiswal:

Cricket-y reading to keep you occupied:

Taha Hashim penned this lovely piece on Jimmy Anderson:

and Ali Martin has the latest on the England camp the morning after the day before:

Simon McMahon has seen an opportunity and gone for it:

“Hi Jim! Seeing as there’s no cricket (yet), maybe you can indulge me, and I’m sure a few others, by saying Happy Mother’s Day to mother’s everywhere, and in particular my own, the sainted Margaret, and of course not forgetting my wife (and mother of our children) Lisa. They both have no interest in cricket, but have family in New Zealand, so maybe somebody will let them know they’ve appeared on the OBO. I’m sure they’ll be thrilled. Go New Zealand!”

Job done. Someone give Margaret and Lisa a nudge? Welcome to the good books, Simon.

Yuck

“Evening/morning James”

Same to you Tom Porter!

“I’m 10 mins west of the ground and it’s still raining heavily (11am). I’m not complaining as after three great days at the ground I’m stuck in the office until 3pm, when I’ll head over, so I’m hoping the 6 wickets will fall after then!! As an Englishman resident in Christchurch, it’s lovely to see what a buzz the potential of a Black Caps win has brought to local cricket fans (30 years of hurt!) After the last three days, how can you not love Test cricket?!”

This is all working out perfectly for you isn’t it Tom? You lucky lad. Back to work you skiver!

Apparently this is the heaviest rain Christchurch has seen in months… BUT reports are that it should pass over by this afternoon at the very least.

It’s Brolly Time:

Weather watch: It is raining, the covers are on and we are going to have a delayed start.

Adam Buckby sends some local intel: “Hey Jim, it’s hammering it down, but meant to get better this afternoon. It’s been so dry in Christchurch this year that you can’t really moan (unless you’re having to stay awake in London watching nothing I guess) – they’ll be a result one way or another in the next 2 days. Let’s go the Blackcaps.”

No moaning from me, ain’t got nowhere else to be. Sleep? Pah!

Gah – spoke to soon! Any OBOers in Christchurch? Drop us a line and let us know how it’s looking?

Sunny days, where have you gone?

There’s enough blue sky to make a pair of sailor’s trousers as my ma would say (Happy Mother’s Day Kathy!*) Hopefully this means they’ll start on time.

*XOXO

Updated

Let’s hope it isn’t one of those days:

Preamble

Hello and welcome to day four of New Zealand v Australia from Christchurch’s Hagley Oval. Well, well, well – we’ve got the makings of a corker on our hands here. After a fightback on day three with bat and then ball from New Zealand the game is tantalisingly poised.

Australia need 202 more runs to win and take the series 2-0, however, their top order are back in the hutch after a magnificent spell of seam bowling last evening from Matt Henry and debutant Ben Sears. Six wickets to play with then for the visitors, the engine room of Travis Head and Mitchell Marsh at the crease. For New Zealand, it’s a matter of pocketing six more wickets in order to chalk up their first home Test win against Australia in over thirty years.

It promises to be a belter then… if the rain stays away. My sources at the ground tell me there’s some mizzle about this morning in Christchurch but that it should clear off at some point this morning to leave a decent prospect of a result today.

Jim here with you for the first half of the day, play is due to start at 11am local/9am AEDT and 10pm where I am in murky old London town. Please do drop me a line with your musings or missives. Any Kiwis out there chewing their cuticles? Email or tweet @Jimbo_Cricket with some twitchy correspondence.

I’ll be back shortly, in the meantime – catch up with yesterday’s action why don’t ya:

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