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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Boult, Southee script series win

New Zealand 293 (Neesham 78, Benn 5-93) and 331 for 7 dec (Williamson 161*, Roach 4-55) beat West Indies 317 (Brathwaite 68, Wagner 4-64) and 254 (Holder 52, Southee 3-28, Boult 3-49) by 53 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

Trent Boult and Tim Southee shepherded New Zealand to their first series win away from home against a top-eight nation in 12 years.

New Zealand's declaration with an overnight lead of 307 had lazily been dubbed brave. The fact that they were away from home would have been discussed. The criticism they would invite if West Indies overhauled the target and claim the series had the potential to frighten. But Brendon McCullum does not appear a captain who prefers the safe route. Moreover, in Boult and Southee, he had two exceptional new-ball bowlers, who would be operating against a depleted batting line-up. It wasn't a punt. McCullum was simply giving his bowlers the time they would need to dismiss the opposition, especially with showers predicted. Two of them did interrupt play, but in the end they contributed to a stunning finish as the Test went down to the final hour.

It took Jason Holder, a debutant at No. 7, to provide the hosts' strongest source of resistance. He sustained a painful blow to the thumb while tackling a short-ball barrage but shook it off. After some time at the crease, he even took them on and when the ball ventured closer to his half, he played some sweet drives to fuel the innings' only half-century. Shane Shillingford provided dogged support as the eighth wicket contributed 77 runs. He weaved under bouncers, took body blows when the fifth-day pitch misbehaved and hit out with impressive power but their efforts could not resurrect a poor top-order performance.

Boult's skill in swinging the ball both ways left the batsmen noticeably unsure. Kraigg Brathwaite shouldered arms to a rousing indipper that slid off his pad to cannon into off stump. Kirk Edwards followed the same method but had managed to protect his stumps with his pads. Boult flew into an appeal and the umpire obliged, but DRS surprisingly indicated that the ball would have bounced over off stump. Edwards survived but he was clearly shaken. Another lovely delivery - this one eased across the right-hander - took the outside edge and found Ross Taylor at second slip.

A sedate Chris Gayle was hoping to occupy the crease until New Zealand's momentum eased off. However, Southee enticed him with a fuller delivery and a booming drive ended up deflecting the ball back onto his stumps. West Indies had crumbled to 31 for 3 and were eyeing another collapse in the face. Shivnarine Chanderpaul abated those concerns for a brief period but traipsed down the track against offspinner Mark Craig to be stumped for the first time in 266 innings to leave his side reeling again.

Southee pierced through the middle order with an intelligent exhibition of seam bowling. He had a battle of patience with Darren Bravo, who had seemed intent on making up for a loose shot in the first innings. He was tight around his off stump and held his drives in check for 97 balls. Then came the teaser outside off and Bravo just couldn't help himself - he perished at gully for the second time in the match. Denesh Ramdin succumbed soon after and a lengthy tail was exposed.

Craig did his bit to assist the seamers and with ample assistance from a worn pitch, he was able to generate good flight and dip to ensure the batsmen were being strangled from both ends. His heroics with the bat have overshadowed his primary responsibility but today he was key in quelling the lower order's defiance. New Zealand have looked an impressive outfit over their home summer but success on the road would rank all the more sweeter - it was only their fifth away Test win in five years.

Getting better

6

No. of times New Zealand have won against West Indies in 15 Tests since 2001. Prior to that the count was six in 30 Tests.

The streak ends

265

No. of innings Shivnarine Chanderpaul has batted before the first time he was out stumped in Tests

Southee v Gayle

6

No. of times Tim Southee has now dismissed Chris Gayle in international cricket (from 19 innings) - thrice in this Test series

In theory...

291/9

WI's projected score at the end of the 98 allotted overs. Their mean 4th innings RPO is 2.97 and runs/wicket is 30.3.

Last man standing

10

No. of times Chris Gayle has remained not out at the end of the fourth innings, from 41 previous innings

Elite club

5

Kane Williamson becomes the fifth New Zealand player to score more than 400 runs in a Test series of three matches or under

Rare feat

25

No. of instances New Zealand batsmen have hit second-innings tons abroad

Old-fashioned player

22

No. of balls per boundary for BJ Watling since 2010 - the most (poorest) for any NZ player.

Run machine

9

No. of 40+ scores for Williamson in his last 12 innings, including 3 hundreds and 3 fifties.