MOUNT MAUNGANUI — The Bay Oval surface arrived dressed in green and expectation, hinting strongly at movement, menace, and opportunity for fast bowlers.
When New Zealand captain Tom Latham won the toss and elected to bat, Roston Chase’s West Indies appeared quietly satisfied, confident their pace trio could exploit early conditions.
For the opening hour, that belief seemed justified. Kemar Roach, Jayden Seales, and Anderson Phillip extracted swing and seam, repeatedly beating the outside edges of both openers in a probing, high-quality examination.
What never arrived, however, was the breakthrough.
Survival turns to supremacy
Once Latham and Devon Conway emerged unscathed from the opening exchanges, the balance shifted decisively. After the first eight overs, West Indian discipline began to fray. Lengths wandered, pressure ebbed, and the opportunity slipped away.
By the close of the morning session, New Zealand had eased to 83 without loss, their openers firmly in command and yet to offer a genuine chance.
Afternoon acceleration leaves West Indies searching
The contest tilted sharply after lunch. Boundaries began to arrive with increasing frequency as Chase searched unsuccessfully for answers. Conway, in particular, made his intentions unmistakable, dismantling Roach in one over with three authoritative boundaries, driven, pulled, and punched with precision.
Both batters passed their half-centuries in cruise control, and even a brief rain interruption failed to slow the momentum.
A session of unchecked dominance
The middle session belonged entirely to New Zealand. A brutal 133 runs in 29 overs, without a single maiden, underlined the hosts’ supremacy. Conway treated spin with open disdain, stepping into Roston Chase and driving elegantly on the up to reach his sixth Test century.
A rare moment of concern followed when a delivery from Seales reared sharply into Conway’s forearm, but after brief treatment, he resumed without hesitation.
Centuries after tea, history in motion
Latham reached his own milestone after tea, registering his 15th Test hundred, as West Indies’ frustrations deepened. A dropped chance off Latham and a succession of boundary-filled overs further drained the visitors’ resolve.
The partnership surged past 300, cementing its place in the record books and placing the match firmly under New Zealand’s control.
The only respite for the West Indies came with the second new ball. Bowling around the wicket, Roach finally found the edge of Latham’s bat on 152, with Chase holding a sharp, low catch at first slip.
The wicket arrived after 86.4 overs, the fourth-longest wait for a wicket this century, surpassed only by Zimbabwe’s 114.1 overs against the West Indies in Bulawayo in 2023.
It brought an end to a colossal 323-run opening stand, the joint 12th-highest in Test history and the highest ever recorded by New Zealand.
Conway marches on, West Indies left to regroup
Conway remained immovable, closing the day unbeaten on 178, with a maiden Test double-century firmly within reach.
For the West Indies, a day that began with genuine promise unraveled into a physically taxing and mentally draining ordeal. With New Zealand entrenched at 334 for one, the visitors now face a monumental challenge to claw their way back into the Test.

















