Wellington v Otago
Until the 1970s, provincial cricket was played on Christmas Day in New Zealand. There would be a late start to allow for the hasty opening of presents and the bolting down of some turkey, but the afternoon could be spent on the bank at the Basin, Lancaster Park or Carisbrook. Perhaps it is as well that the practice was abandoned; the ensuing negotiations would be tricky in many households.
In Wellington we have the pleasing new tradition (this
is its third year, so “tradition” passes, just) of Christmas Eve cricket, a T20
double-header, to be precise.
All fixtures in New Zealand’s domestic T20 competition—not merely the “Smash” but the “Super Smash”—pair a women’s game with that of the
same men’s teams, the women usually (but not always) playing first. All games are
shown on television, with 18 of the men’s games and 15 of the women’s
free-to-air (with the imminent closure of rights-holders Spark Sport, from next
season all domestic and international cricket in New Zealand will be free-to-air
for three seasons).
The Basin is at its best at this time of year. The cricket-ball
red flowers of the puhutukawa trees bloom for Christmas, draping a crimson
ribbon round the ground and up the hill to Government House. The bank was
near-full, with an increasing number of spectators arriving in time to take in
most of the women’s game. Despite the presence of Billy Bowden, Rain-deviner-in-chief,
the sun was out, and all was right with the world.
Otago will look back at both games with the ruefulness
of a child who wakes up on Christmas Day to find that Santa has stolen their
presents from under the tree. They could and should have won them both.
When both Kerr sisters were out with the score on 110
in the 17th over it seemed that Wellington would be some way short of setting a
challenging target, but Maddy Green and Leigh Kasperek took 31 from the final
two overs to finish the innings on 146 for five, very attainable with Suzie
Bates opening for Otago.
With Ebrahim, Bates put on 49 for the third wicket, but
five was the most scored from any over between the third and the ninth, which
left an asking rate of almost ten an over, unsustainable against an attack of
the quality of Wellington’s. The innings subsided like a sherry-filled grandma
into an armchair after the Christmas pudding. Wellington won by 19 runs.
Kasperek was the best bowler with three for 16. Her omission from New Zealand’s
World Cup squad last year remains mystifying.
For the men, Adam Milne made his Wellington debut,
after 12 years with Central Districts. As Kent fans know, Milne is a quality bowler
who offers a desirable combination of pace and smarts, so the Basin faithful
were pleased to hear that he was coming to the capital. However, some of us
were sceptical that we would ever see him in a Wellington shirt on the field of
play, given that he is a regular in the white-ball national squad, in demand
from the franchises, and more prone to breakage than a Chinese vase in a situation
comedy. Yet here he was.
The match followed the pattern of that of the women.
Wellington batted first and reached an underwhelming 152. It was only thanks to
Rachin Ravindra that it was that many. Regular readers may be rather bored by
my regular extolling of Ravindra’s qualities and class, but I can merely report
what I see. Here, once more, time appeared to move more slowly when he was at
the crease, such was the facility of his shots.
A team chasing a modest total and that is 80 for one
after 12 overs, as Otago were, should not lose. But they blew it. Run rates
that were unimaginable twenty years ago are now commonplace. Ten an over is the
new six an over. But this is not an entitlement, as Otago demonstrated here. They
were complacent, expecting to go up through the gears as they wanted. When 29
came from overs 17 and 18 they would have considered themselves on track, but
no further boundaries ensued and they lost by eight runs. They had the chance
to secure the game earlier and should have taken it.
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