Kavem Hodge’s Gritty Hundred Helps West Indies Avoid Follow-On Vs New Zealand

Star allrounder Kavem Hodge scored his second Test hundred on Saturday, December 20, as the West Indies avoided the follow-on in the third Test at Mount Maunganui.

At stumps on the third day, the West Indies were 381-6, still 194 runs behind, with Hodge unbeaten on 109 and Anderson Phillip at the other end on 12.

The 32-year-old Hodge reached his century off 224 balls, hitting 12 boundaries, and was dropped on 74 by Daryl Mitchell off Ajaz Patel. It took him 33 balls to get through the 90s, including a long stoppage on 97 after being hit painfully in the box by a Michael Rae delivery.

“Thankfully, I was able to get over it and go past the landmark,” Hodge said.

“I told myself, hey, I spent all day getting to 90. I still have all day tomorrow. Just stick to the processes,” Hodge added.

“It makes no sense, I work so hard from zero to 90 and then go change. So stick to the processes, keep concentrating on every opportunity I get.”

Hodge shared an 81-run partnership with Justin Greaves, edging the visitors closer to the follow-on target of 375, and made fifty stands with Tevin Imlach and Alick Athanaze.

New Zealand received a spark from an unlikely source when Mitchell trapped Greaves lbw for 43, just his fourth Test wicket in his 35th match.

Batting suddenly looked a lot harder as West Indies captain Roston Chase came and went, trapped lbw by Patel.

Leading batsman Shai Hope was missing on Saturday because of food poisoning.

Phillip came to the crease and should have been out for two when edging Patel to wicketkeeper Tom Blundell, but New Zealand did not appeal. He was then dropped on eight from Patel’s bowling by Rae at mid-on.

Jacob Duffy had 2-79 from 31 overs, while Patel took 2-94 in 33 overs, ending his unwanted record of being the bowler to take the most Test wickets without a single one at home.

Patel’s 86th Test wicket was his first in New Zealand, bowling Athanaze in the middle session, some 2,562 days since his first Test in New Zealand and with his 394th ball on home soil.

“It was more like, once that was out of the way, then I can focus solely on the game and not have that in the back of my mind,” Patel said.

“I think there were probably moments where I maybe went searching for it.

“But at the same time, I’ve played a lot of first-class cricket in New Zealand and you have to get to 25, 30 overs, and then you reap your rewards.”

England’s Billy Bates, who took 50 wickets between 1882 and 1887, all in Australia, has regained the dubious honour in Test history books.

The West Indies resumed on Saturday at 110-0 and added only one run before Duffy struck in the second over as John Campbell edged to Tom Latham at second slip without adding to his overnight 45.

The wicket ended the first West Indies century opening stand since February 2023.

Duffy then bowled Brandon King, who had begun the day on 55, for 63.

New Zealand declared their first innings on Friday at a mammoth 575-8, anchored by Devon Conway’s epic 227 and captain Latham’s 137.

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