<*> Zimbabwe v West Indies odi series <*>

BEST OF 5 SERIES

Zimbabwe v West Indies, 1st ODI, Bulawayo

scorecard of 1st odi @ bulawayo

West Indies 347 for 6 (Gayle 153*, Lara 113) beat Zimbabwe 173 for 3 (Wishart 72*, Sibanda 58) by 51 runs (D/L method)

gayle and lara shine *1st odi match report !!!

West Indies won the opening one-day international against Zimbabwe by 51 runs in a rain-affected match at Bulawayo. Chris Gayle scored a one-day best of 153 not out, and he put on an electrifying 176 with Brian Lara, who smashed 113 off 82. West Indies made an imposing 347 for 6 and, in their reply, Zimbabwe had reached 173 for 3 from 34.5 overs before the heavens opened and brought an early end to the contest.

There is not much any bowling attack in the world can do when Lara is at the top of his form, and Zimbabwe’s hard working, but limited, resources had little chance of keeping him quiet.

The word Bulawayo means ‘place of slaughter’, and that was exactly what it was for the bowlers, as Lara tore them to shreds as he moved from 50 to 100 in only 24 balls. Zimbabwe did not bowl badly, and at times they did bowl well, but they were nothing more than cannon-fodder for Lara.

Lara came in on the back of a sound opening partnership of 77 in 16.5 overs between Gayle and Wavell Hinds after West Indies won the toss on a superb batting pitch with a fast outfield. Lara’s innings overshadowed another fine century, by Gayle, who has not had much success so far on this tour.

Gayle began cautiously, but gradually opened up to dominate the opening partnership. Heath Streak and Andy Blignaut, Zimbabwe’s opening bowlers, managed to keep the brakes on without looking dangerous, and they were backed up by some excellent fielding, with Vusi Sibanda in particular distinguishing himself.

Astute field placings also forced the West Indian openers to work hard for their runs, but they had maintained a rate of more than four an over when the first wicket fell, as Hinds (28) flashed outside the off stump to Blignaut and edged a straightforward catch to Tatenda Taibu (77 for 1).

Lara soon left his stamp with two superb boundaries through extra cover. He was in awesome form, and after passing fifty he unleashed the full range of his repertoire, with his cover-drives and fierce pulls being the most memorable shots. It was his 18th one-day century and it took a brilliant run-out to remove him - he attempted a quick single to mid-on and Gary Brent pounced on the ball and threw down the stumps (253 for 2).

Then there was a flurry of activity as a fine throw from the covers by Streak removed Ramnaresh Sarwan without him having faced a ball (289 for 5). Shivnarine Chanderpaul was lbw sweeping at Sean Ervine for 8 (282 for 4) and then Marlon Samuels, after hitting his first ball for six, went down the pitch to Stuart Matsikenyeri and was bowled off his pads (289 for 5). Ricardo Powell played a cameo innings, scoring 17 off eight balls, before driving Streak to Sibanda at long-on (328 for 6).

Gayle stayed until the end, taking a two off the final ball to reach 153, the highest of his six one-day centuries. He faced 160 balls and hit 19 fours and two sixes. The nearest he came to giving a chance was when he skied a ball just clear of the covers when on 76. The only time he and Lara had any trouble was when Streak returned to reverse-swing the old ball, but they handled it the easy way - by complaining to the umpires that they couldn’t see the ball and having it changed.

Sibanda and Trevor Gripper began Zimbabwe’s reply with some good running between the wickets, but the possibility of rain soon persuaded Lara to bring on his spinners to hustle through the overs.

Sibanda and Gripper put on 40 before Gripper (16) drove Gayle, only for Lara, running from mid-off, to get a hand to the ball and catch the rebound. Incredibly, Zimbabwe lost another wicket the very next ball when Mark Vermeulen edged the ball low to slip, where Chanderpaul juggled the ball and finally held it.

Sibanda, on his one-day debut, played some classic strokes, though, and Craig Wishart settled in well. They shared a stand of 110 in 21 overs, with Sibanda just beating Wishart to his fifty. He was out for 58, though, checking a cut and lobbing a catch to backward point off Vasbert Drakes (150 for 3).

Blignaut came in next, but the rain soon followed. Two attempts were made to restart, but light showers kept intervening, and the match was eventually called off. West Indies won handsomely, thanks to batting of the highest class, but Zimbabwe at least went down fighting.

Wishart finished unbeaten on 72, and the wonder remains why such class shines so intermittently. There was a joyful crowd of several thousand who provided a wonderful atmosphere, and most of them stayed in hope until the end. *

**Zimbabwe v West Indies, 2nd ODI, Bulawayo **

scorecard of 2nd odi @ bulawayo

  • Zimbabwe 128 for 4 (Vermeulen 66*, Streak 38*) beat West Indies 125 all out (Samuels 36*) by 6 wickets

Vermeulen takes Zimbabwe to victory *2nd odi match report!!!

An unbeaten 66 from Mark Vermeulen helped Zimbabwe to beat West Indies by six wickets and draw level in the five-match one-day series. After West Indies won the toss and batted, they crumbled to a meagre 125, which Zimbabwe strolled past with more than 20 overs to spare.

While the batsmen gorged themselves at Bulawayo yesterday, it was a different story today on a pitch with a little more spin and bounce. West Indies never got going and collapsed astonishingly, while Zimbabwe struggled nervously to reach their low target until Vermeulen and Heath Streak finally took charge in the final half-hour.

West Indies’ failure was due to a mixture of accurate bowling, good fielding, and batting errors. Saturday’s centurymakers, Chris Gayle and Brian Lara, scored just 10 runs between them, and the only batsman to put up a real fight was Marlon Samuels, who finished unbeaten on 36.

Zimbabwe appeared to have little better to look forward to than another hard slog in the field as Gayle and Wavell Hinds made a confident start. However, that soon changed when Gayle wafted outside the off stump at Andy Blignaut and nudged a gentle catch to Tatenda Taibu, the wicketkeeper, for 8 (18 for 1). Lara started comfortably enough, but then the ground erupted as he tried to turn a full, straight one from Blignaut to leg, and was plumb leg-before for 2 (26 for 2).

Those two big wickets stripped West Indies of their confidence. Hinds and Ramnaresh Sarwan dug in, but did not try to take control. Hinds had made 17 when he was deceived into edging Sean Ervine’s slower ball to Taibu while driving outside off (41 for 3). Shivnarine Chanderpaul, after settling in, decided the time had come to take charge. He hit Gary Brent for four and six off successive balls, and then launched a fierce off-drive – but Streak took a superb diving catch at short extra cover (71 for 4).

Two balls later and things got worse for West Indies. Samuels called for a quick single to midwicket, only for Blignaut to make a superb pick-up and throw – and brilliantly run Sarwan out for a dogged 13.

The one-way traffic continued. Ricardo Powell struggled to 6 off 20 balls before he tried to dab Ray Price to third man and edged a catch behind (85 for 6). The tail then wilted under the pressure, as the bowlers never let up. Carlton Baugh and Vasbert Drakes both fell to Trevor Gripper, both for 2, and Ravi Rampaul became Price’s second victim for a single. Samuels, meanwhile, was left stranded at the other end.

Zimbabwe, however, were not long in imitating the headless-chicken behaviour that is often associated with their batting when put under pressure. In only the third over, Gripper pulled Rampaul towards the distant midwicket boundary and ran himself out for 6, attempting a highly improbable fourth run (8 for 1). Without addition, Vusi Sibanda, who had not scored, slashed at a short one from Drakes too close to his body, and was caught by Baugh.

Craig Wishart made only 8 before trying to pull the wrong ball from Corey Collymore, and was caught by Sarwan at mid-on (31 for 3), and Stuart Matsikenyeri (3) then missed a Collymore yorker (54 for 4). It was a wise decision by Streak, the team’s best man in a crisis, to come in next. He survived two hard chances early on, and these proved to be the final turning points of the match.

Zimbabwe were deeply grateful that Vermeulen was at the other end, looking as languid and unconcerned as ever, and striking the ball effortlessly through the off side. He hit 13 fours in his valuable innings – the third fifty of his one-day career.

Just after Vermeulen reached his half-century, off 65 balls, Streak decided it was time to make his move. He hit Rampaul for three fours in an over, and the shackles finally fell off as Zimbabwe cruised to victory with no further difficulty. Fittingly, it was a typically stylish four through the covers by Vermeulen, the Man of the Match, which took his side home and levelled the series. *

Score card

WI failed to chase 230 to win.

Result: Zimbabwe won by 21 runs
Series: Zimbabwe leads the 5-ODI series 2-1

Streak inspires Zimbabwe to 21-run win

November 26, 2003

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Heath Streak: again showed his value to Zimbabwe’s cause with a fighting 65 not out and 3 for 45
© Getty Images

In an exciting finish, Zimbabwe put up another fine disciplined performance to beat West Indies by 21 runs, and take a 2-1 lead in the five-match series. It was absorbing, rather than champagne, cricket, with discipline instead of flair the order of the day - but another dedicated bowling performance by Andy Blignaut and Heath Streak was, in the end, the telling factor.

Zimbabwe might have done a little better than their eventual 229, as they still had five wickets in hand, but they chose to play safe first rather than back themselves to reach 250. In the field, though, their discipline triumphed over West Indies’ initial flair, which then turned to nerves.

Wavell Hinds made most of the early running in the run-chase, hitting a glorious six over long-on in Streak’s second over, but after he had made 13, he edged an offcutter from Blignaut to the keeper (24 for 1). Tatenda Taibu was again in the action in the next over when Ramnaresh Sarwan, facing his first ball, fished outside off and also found the edge, this time off Streak (25 for 2).

Chris Gayle and Brian Lara then took charge, mixing sound defence with some dazzling attacking strokes. Zimbabwe’s second-string bowlers scarcely threatened, so Streak decided, as so often, that if anything dramatic was going to happen he was going to have to do it himself.

Bringing himself on for a second spell, he produced a superb yorker to Lara (34) to match his one from the Bulawayo Test. It pierced that high backlift and hit middle and leg (95 for 3). This proved to be a major turning point, as West Indies were just beginning to pull ahead, thanks to Gayle, who was playing the anchor role.

Shivnarine Chanderpaul contributed 19 before top-edging a sweep off Ray Price, who was doing a fine containing job, and West Indies were losing their way (120 for 4). But then the balance swung back, as Marlon Samuels raced to 25 off only 19 balls.

And then it all changed again, as Streak, with only two overs left himself, decided to bowl out Blignaut in an effort to force another breakthrough. It was an inspired move. Samuels ill-advisedly lofted a pull to the midwicket boundary, and was caught by Sean Ervine (164 for 5), then next ball Ricardo Powell was yorked by Blignaut. In the space of two balls, 164 for 4 had become a much shakier 164 for 6, and the balance had well and truly swung towards Zimbabwe. And this time it didn’t swing back.

Zimbabwe never relaxed their grip, and each of the bowlers did his job. Six runs later Gayle finally fell for 61, slashing at Blignaut outside the off stump to give Taibu another of his four catches (170 for 7). There was still the chance of a lightning innings from Ridley Jacobs or Vasbert Drakes, but the bowlers kept their nerve and, strangely, the batsmen seemed to lack the nerve to attack, preferring instead to look mainly for ones and twos.

It was a forlorn policy, and the crowd of nearly 3000 were jubilant when the last wicket fell at 208 when Corey Collymore was lbw to Ervine, leaving Jacobs stranded on 25.

It represented another improvement from Zimbabwe, who have recovered well from their heavy defeat in the first match, and who again were thankful to their captain for bailing them out of trouble with the bat. Streak hit a careful 65 not out and, along with Mark Vermeulen, rescued Zimbabwe from a treacherous 85 for 4 to a respectable 229 for 5.

After they were put in, the openers Vusi Sibanda and Trevor Gripper made a solid start, but after they had put on 22, the top order folded. However, Streak, ever the man for a crisis, batted solidly, although he waited a little too long before deciding it was time for the final assault, preferring to dab and push.

It took him 76 balls to reach his fifty, his tenth in one-dayers but surprisingly his first in Zimbabwe. He supported Vermeulen well, who continued his good form with a breezy 66 from 70 balls. Streak and Taibu then added a vital 90 in 13.3 overs, and even though the total looked a little short, it proved more than adequate in the end.

© Wisden Cricinfo Ltd

http://www-usa.cricket.org/db/ARCHIVE/CRICKET_NEWS/2003/NOV/011940_ZIMWI2003-04_26NOV2003.html

What a great allrounder Streak is, he is constantly performed for his team, just imagine if he was part of Aus or Saf, he would have been world class.

He is right up there with Flintoff, Cairns, Kallis, Pollock.

West Indies 256/3 (45/45 ov)
Zimbabwe 150/7 (32.0/32 ov)

Result: West Indies won by 72 runs (D/L method)
Series: 5-ODI series level 2-2

Zimbabwe top order rolled over for only 22 runs. Only Ervine and T Taibu scored 37 and 66. While from W Indies Hinds scored 127 no, and Gayle 51. From WI Edwards took 6 for 22 :eek:

This guy Fewdel Edwards has already made strong impressions in his sortest career so far, he is pacey, bowls continously around 90 mph and can swing too. Best Debut bowling wise and already has taken two five wicket hauls in his first two test matches … Surely a great find for windies. :k:

Zim 196 in 47.5 overs, all out… CH Gayle 4/24
WI 197 in 25.4 overs, CH Gayle 112 runs :k:

Result: West Indies won by 8 wickets
Series: West Indies wins the 5-ODI series 3-2

4th one day international scorecard, fidel edwards 6 /22!!!

5th one day international scorecard, *gayle 4/24 & 112 **