Dusk drama at Hagley Oval as Duffy’s spell breaks open tight Test

Day two at Hagley Oval ended nothing like it appeared it would. With heavy clouds pressing down, drizzle sweeping the ground, and New Zealand restricted to spin-only because of fading light, the West Indies walked off at 157 for 6, believing the day had ground to its natural halt.

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It felt like a pause that would carry them safely to the next morning.

Instead, the weather relented, the floodlights surged to life, and the umpires summoned the tourists back into the arena, an unwelcome reprieve for New Zealand, and ultimately a disastrous one for the West Indies.

Duffy emerges from the gloom

Jacob Duffy, who had spent the evening expecting nothing more strenuous than watching the light meter, was suddenly given a brand-new stage. And he turned it into a whirlwind act. Four wickets in the space of 10 balls flipped the innings on its head and sent the West Indies from tentative stability to all out for 167.

His eruption meant New Zealand strode away with a lead that ballooned to 96 by stumps, unburdened by the loss of a single second-innings wicket.

A match of striking parallels until it wasn’t

Up to that point, the test had resembled a strange reflection: both sides batting in fits and starts, both showing technical wobbles, both leaking opportunities. The duel often looked like two flawed teams shadowing each other, each waiting for the other to blink.

New Zealand’s own first innings had dipped to 148 for 6, and the West Indies, despite arriving on the back of heavy defeats across formats, had displayed enough resilience to suggest this Test might defy expectations. Yet the visitors, who earlier in the year were skittled for 27 in Australia and fell to Nepal in T20Is, were showing more discipline than many predicted.

The Black Caps, meanwhile, have not exactly been irresistible in home Tests in recent years, winning just two of their last seven series.

West Indies find their bearings

Supported partly by New Zealand’s fielding lapses, the West Indies worked their way into the contest on Wednesday afternoon. Missed chances, including two reprieves for Tagenarine Chanderpaul at leg gully, gave the tourists belief that an upset might be brewing.

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The pitch offered enough movement to trouble convention, which is precisely why Chanderpaul’s innings stood apart. With the distinctive open stance inherited from his father, he neutralized the dangerous corridor that had undone so many of his teammates.

Chanderpaul batted with unyielding discipline across 169 deliveries, partnering Shai Hope for a 90-run stand that gave the innings definition. His fortune eventually ran out when Devon Conway, finally clinging to a chance after earlier errors, held onto a skied hook off Zak Foulkes.

Makeshift attacks, high-impact returns

Both bowling units entered the match with notable absences. New Zealand were missing Will O’Rourke, Kyle Jamieson, and Ben Sears. The West Indies lacked the express pairing of Alzarri and Shamar Joseph. Yet the contest remained ferocious, with fewer than 400 runs scored across the first 20 wickets.

Jayden Seales needed only three balls on Wednesday morning to finish New Zealand’s first innings and move to within single digits of 100 Test scalps, a remarkable milestone in his 25th match.

Kemar Roach, returning to the format after a lengthy break, brought vastly more experience than the entire collection of New Zealand’s seam understudies put together. Between Ojay Shields, Johann Layne, Foulkes, Duffy, and Nathan Smith, the hosts have only 11 Tests.

Still, Matt Henry was the day’s tone-setter. His nagging accuracy and late movement gave him figures of 3 for 43 from 22 overs, leaving the West Indies repeatedly uncomfortable.

Everything changes in the spotlight

The evening’s final act, staged beneath artificial light, redrew the storyline. What had been an even, attritional Test suddenly swung hard toward the home side. All it took was a brief spell delivered with absolute clarity and intensity.

The West Indies may lament that the conditions conspired against them, but the turning point was unmistakable: a second chance at play that they wished had never come, and a fast bowler who seized it with both hands.

 

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