
indiatoday
indiatoday|07-11-2025
Mark Chapman was the standout for New Zealand, producing a rapid-fire 78 off 28 that shifted momentum.
He blasted three sixes and a four in one over off Romario Shepherd and scored heavily against Jayden Seales, taking 23 runs in a single over. Daryl Mitchell joined in, hitting three sixes off Akeal Hosein as New Zealand amassed 82 runs in the final four overs. This late surge proved decisive, with the team crossing the 200-run mark and establishing a challenging target for West Indies.Openers Devon Conway and Tim Robinson provided a solid start, putting on 55 runs in seven overs. Both were dismissed in quick succession, but Rachin Ravindra and Chapman consolidated, taking the score to 81/2 by the 13th over.
The middle overs saw measured accumulation before Chapman and Mitchell's late assault, with the final over alone yielding 19 runs as Seales bowled to Santner and Mitchell.Jason Holder provided a brief resurgence with two sixes off Ish Sodhi, but his dismissal left West Indies still needing substantial contributions. In the late overs, Rovman Powell produced a blistering 45 off 16 balls, supported by Romario Shepherd's 34 off 16 and Matthew Forde's unbeaten 29 off 13. The trio combined to add 75 runs in just four overs, shifting the match into a tense finale.
With 16 runs required from the final over, Kyle Jamieson was handed the responsibility to bowl for New Zealand.
Despite conceding two boundaries, Jamieson held his nerve and managed to defend seven runs off the last four balls.Both captains made pivotal decisions, with New Zealand opting for an aggressive batting approach in the death overs and rotating bowlers strategically in the final stages. The decision to bowl Jamieson in the last over proved correct, as he executed his plans under pressure. For the West Indies, the late promotion of power hitters nearly paid dividends, but the early loss of wickets and lack of acceleration through the middle overs hampered their chase.




