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Kiwis seal series in style as West Indies collapse in Dunedin

Admin by Admin
November 15, 2025
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By Ben McLeod (CNW) DUNEDIN, New Zealand — The West Indies’ T20I campaign ended with a muted thud, as their most disjointed showing of the tour handed New Zealand a comfortable eight-wicket victory and a 3-1 series win at the University Oval on Wednesday.

After three razor-tight contests and a rain-ruined affair earlier in the series, the finale brought no such drama. The West Indies mustered only 140 in 18.4 overs—undone yet again by a frail top order—before the Black Caps chased the target with ease, reaching 141 for two inside 16 overs.

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A risky selection backfires

Despite his side’s recurring batting issues, head coach Daren Sammy rolled the dice by sacrificing an opener. Amir Jangoo made way for fast bowler Jayden Seales, a move that compressed the batting and pushed captain Shai Hope to the top of the order alongside Alick Athanaze.

Hope briefly suggested the gamble might pay off. He opened the match by lifting Jacob Duffy’s first delivery over third man for six and ending the over with a crisp boundary through cover. But the optimism evaporated quickly.

Duffy breaks the innings apart

Kyle Jamieson struck in the second over, leaping to pouch a sharp return catch that sent Athanaze back for one. Any hope of stabilising vanished when Duffy, who has tormented the visitors all series, ripped through the top order in a devastating second over.

He first removed Hope, whose mistimed heave soared to Devon Conway behind the stumps. Two balls later he trapped Ackeem Auguste with a late inswinger that clattered into leg stump. Sherfane Rutherford followed without scoring, edging behind to leave the West Indies unraveling at a calamitous 21 for four.

Rovman Powell briefly counterpunched with a six and a four, but his next attempt to clear the ropes found Mark Chapman at the cover boundary. At 48 for five, the West Indies were once again fighting uphill.

Chase and Shepherd offer resistance

Roston Chase and Jason Holder stitched together a 42-run partnership—the only period of West Indian solidity—before Chase, top-scorer with 38, nicked Jimmy Neesham to Conway. Holder soon fell for 20, and Matthew Forde departed without scoring, triggering another mini-collapse that left the innings stalling at 94 for eight.

Romario Shepherd injected late energy with a punchy 36 from 22 balls, guiding the innings to 140 before the final wicket fell with eight deliveries unused. Duffy finished with 4-35, sealing both Player of the Match and Player of the Series honours, while Neesham chipped in with 2-31.

Kiwis stroll to the line

New Zealand’s reply was authoritative from ball one. Tim Robinson unleashed a rapid 45 off 24 balls, combining with Conway in a 69-run opening stand inside seven overs that erased any remaining suspense.

Shepherd eventually shattered the partnership by bowling Robinson, but Conway—calm, controlled, and unbeaten on 47 from 42—carried the chase forward with Ravindra, who added a brisk 21. Even after Ravindra fell to Shamar Springer, the hosts remained miles ahead of the rate, with Chapman’s unbeaten 21 completing the job with 26 balls to spare.

A series that slipped away

For the West Indies, the finale underlined a recurring theme: too much pressure on too few players and an inability to construct meaningful top-order partnerships. For New Zealand, it was the steady closing act of a series in which they showed resilience early and total authority at the finish.

The tourists now leave Dunedin with answers to find and a batting line-up still searching for stability, while the Kiwis celebrate a well-earned triumph built on discipline, depth, and timely bursts of brilliance.

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