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New Zealand [432/6] beat Bangladesh [211 & 209] by an innings and 12 runs and lead the series 2-0

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New Zealand [432/6] beat Bangladesh [211 & 209] by an innings and 12 runs and lead the series 2-0

Bangladesh have never won a Test in New Zealand but now have to win two in a row, starting with the second Test in Wellington from Friday, 8 March

Overview

New Zealand v Bangladesh
2nd Test
Basin Reserve, Wellington
Friday, 8 March; 11:00am local, 10:00pm GMT (-1 day)

Bangladesh’s problems have been laid bare after the Hamilton defeat. They have the potential, but not the intent. Their batsmen have all the shots, but play too many of them. Too often, they try to hit their way out.

It gave them 429 second-innings runs, but on a surface that had lost a lot of its sting. When it is fresh and full of venom, as it was in the first innings, it’s hard to expect more than the 234 they managed after being asked to bat.

Their batsmen at least put on a show: Bangladesh had three centurions in Hamilton and Tamim Iqbal scored 200 runs in the Test. But what of the bowling?

Between them, their three pacers picked up one wicket for 359 runs despite getting a go at New Zealand on the first day, when conditions are as ripe as they get. By contrast, New Zealand’s pacers picked up all 20 wickets. Courtney Walsh has urged patience with Bangladesh’s fast bowlers, but with both remaining Tests now must-win, they'll have to make amends quickly.

Bangladesh’s main strength is spin. Spinners pull the bulk of the weight irrespective of conditions. But Mehidy Hasan, their premier spinner, returned the worst figures for a Bangladesh bowler in a Test innings.

They couldn’t keep it together in the field either, dropping Tom Latham before he had made a run, Kane Williamson on 81 and Colin de Grandhomme on 43. It cost Bangladesh 313 runs. That’s about 44% of the runs New Zealand wound up making.

New Zealand are unstoppable. They are coming off an innings win and the highest total in their Test history.

Williamson is a monster on the threshold of displacing Virat Kohli as the No. 1 batsman on the MRF Tyres ICC Test Batting Rankings. Tom Latham is in the best phase of his career. The middle order is overflowing with runs, and if somehow Bangladesh find a way past that, there’s de Grandhomme ever-ready to thrash worn down attacks.

On the bowling front, Neil Wagner delivers short balls like a bowling machine that is programmed to do so all day. Tim Southee swings the ball like he doesn’t understand the meaning of straight lines. And Trent Boult keeps batsmen forever wide-eyed with searing pace and inch-perfect lengths.

Bangladesh have lost all the eight Tests they have played in New Zealand. Now, they have to win two in a row. It’s a tall ask against a team that hasn’t lost a home series in two years.

Key players
Tom Latham (New Zealand): Wellington is the site of the opening batsman’s magnum opus – the 264* against Sri Lanka. Since that knock, he’s had two more centuries – both over 150 – in three innings. In his last four innings, Latham has spent 1687 minutes at the crease, which amounts to 28 hours. That’s a whole Test match in itself.

Tamim Iqbal (Bangladesh): Left-handed opening batsmen dominated the first Test, with both Latham and Jeet Raval notching up centuries, while Iqbal did the same in the Bangladesh first innings. Iqbal has the class, experience and the burden to deliver. What he doesn’t have is support. Can his team-mates rally around him?

Conditions
The last time Wellington hosted a Test, Latham struck 264*, New Zealand piled on 578, and Angelo Mathews and Kusal Mendis batted out an entire day. Bangladesh will be thrilled if they can produce such an effort, but it won’t win them the series. Also fostering the prospect of a draw is the weather. There is a 100% chance of rain on the opening day, and a 50% chance on the third day. The remaining days have minimal likelihood of rain, but there isn’t a day in the Test without showers forecast.

Squads
New Zealand: Kane Williamson (c), Todd Astle, Trent Boult, Colin de Grandhomme, Matt Henry, Tom Latham, Henry Nicholls, Jeet Raval, Tim Southee, Ross Taylor, Neil Wagner, BJ Watling (wk), Will Young

Bangladesh: Mahmudullah (c), Khaled Ahmed, Shakib Al Hasan, Liton Das (wk), Mominul Haque, Mehidy Hasan, Nayeem Hasan, Ebadat Hossain, Tamim Iqbal, Shadman Islam, Taijul Islam, Abu Jayed, Mohammad Mithun, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mustafizur Rahman, Soumya Sarkar

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1088023
 
No play so far on Day 1 and it seems unlikely at the moment. There will be another inspection at 3:00 PM local time. It is still raining at Basin Reserve though.
 
Play has been called off on Day 1 at Basin Reserve, Wellington in the second Test between New Zealand and Bangladesh. The game will start 30 minutes early tomorrow and will have the toss at 10:00 AM local time.
 
Bangladesh have a better chance of saving this Test now!
 
well played by bangladesh, 2 days in the test match,and STILL on level terms with new zealand.
 
Great hour or so for Bangladesh.

God it's painful to watch our bowlers bowl when conditions don't suit them. Too one dimensional, this is partly why I found it laughable that we had somehow made it to second in the rankings.

India, Aus, SA and England are better teams.
 
Great hour or so for Bangladesh.

God it's painful to watch our bowlers bowl when conditions don't suit them. Too one dimensional, this is partly why I found it laughable that we had somehow made it to second in the rankings.

India, Aus, SA and England are better teams.

You are getting impatient , BD is no match for this pace attack outside subcontinent.
 
Tea on Day three

BD bowled out for 211

Kiwis need to bat at fast pace if they want to win this game. Try and get a substantial lead by the end of day 4 , and then hope there pace battery do a good job.
 
1-119 to 211 all out :facepalm:

I swear each of the past 4 tests between these 2 teams have been a carbon copy of one another where BD batting has collapsed after being in a position of dominance.
 
Play was finally possible in Wellington, after the rain relented a bit on Sunday, 10 March, making way for plenty of action in the 72.4 overs that were bowled, with New Zealand bundling out Bangladesh for 211 before being reduced to 38/2.

However, rain returned late in the day to force early stumps, leaving the home side with a deficit of 173 runs to make up. If the pace of play is set to continue in this click, and if rain stays away sufficiently, there might yet be a result in this Test.

Neil Wagner and Trent Boult might have a lot to do with that. Wagner returned a brilliant 4/28 – his second four-wicket haul this series – to puncture Bangladesh, and Boult’s 3/38 nipped out the tail, as Bangladesh folded in just 61 overs.

Once again, it was a failure of their middle order after the openers had laid a platform. Tamim Iqbal and Shadman Islam put on a quick 75 for the opening wicket, with Iqbal once again looking extremely solid and full of intent, even as Islam supported him assiduously.

However, the story was the same once the partnership was broken. Colin de Grandhomme forced Islam (27 off 53) to edge to first slip, and the rest of the batsmen failed to sufficiently build on the foundation.

Wagner sent back Mominul Haque (15 off 38) and Mohammad Mithun (3 off 10) in quick succession. When he followed that up with the big scalp of Iqbal (74 off 114), Bangladesh were in all sorts of trouble at 134/4.

They never really recovered thereafter. Soumya Sarkar (20 off 24) looked to hit his way out of trouble, picking up two fours and a six, while Mahmudullah (13 off 35) put away a couple of fours as well, but it was all ultimately futile as they struggled to build partnerships.

Bangladesh had something to cheer about late in the day Bangladesh had something to cheer about late in the day
Eventually, Taijul Islam and Liton Das put on a 38-run stand for the seventh wicket, with Das doing most of the scoring. But that proved to be just a brief break in the order of the day. When Boult trapped Islam in front for a 35-ball 8, the slide continued. The last four Bangladesh wickets fell for just five runs.

However, their bowlers had something to cheer about when they returned to the field as Abu Jayed, the paceman, had the New Zealand openers – Jeet Raval and Tom Latham, centurions in Hamilton – dismissed for 3 and 4 respectively.

New Zealand were a bit shaken, but Kane Williamson (10*) and Ross Taylor (19*) had initiated recovery, putting on 30 for the third wicket, when rain reappeared to put an end to the day’s proceedings.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1092612
 
forecast going ahead ? incidentally , another drop-in pitch despite green carpet not as conducive as it appeared before start of play ...
 
Bangladesh coming in with those 130kmph trundlers.
Pakistan is pretty the same right now. Oh how the grace has fallen.
 
These two playing aggressively. Williamson may get another ton and Taylor approaching a ton also.
 
46 runs lead , kiwis would like to get quick runs so that they have a chance to get BD all out again
 
Mominul outside Asia is just a garbage. Bangladesh will suffer continuously if they don't pick players on basis of format. Soumya, Liton, Mithun are not made for tests. Our pace attack is pathetic but these guys should be given more chances to improve. We don't have any express bowler in domestics. That's a real headache for us. You can't win test matches abroad if you don't have quality pacers.
 
Mominul outside Asia is just a garbage. Bangladesh will suffer continuously if they don't pick players on basis of format. Soumya, Liton, Mithun are not made for tests. Our pace attack is pathetic but these guys should be given more chances to improve. We don't have any express bowler in domestics. That's a real headache for us. You can't win test matches abroad if you don't have quality pacers.

All Bangladeshi players except Shakib, Tamim and Mushfiqur are mediocre outside Bangladesh. You guys got really lucky in mid 2000s to get three decent cricketers at the same time.
 
Shameless team. Losing by an innings under 3 days lol.

No offence but you have a large population but still you've been unable to produce a world beater of a team in your whole cricketing history. In other sports as well you're no where to be seen.
What's the reason?
I'm not trynna be offensive it's a geniune question.
 
New Zealand beat Bangladesh by an innings and 12 runs in the second Test in Wellington. Bangladesh were bowled out for 209 in the second innings after resuming the day at 80/3. Neil Wagner with 5/45 and Trent Boult with 4/52 were the chief wickets takers.
 
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Bangladesh are abject at playing the short ball. Wagner was superb but these guys were not helping themselves at all.
 
Utter shambolic performance - this is not only unacceptable but rather out classing, not being belong to the level.

Losing by innings is not a big deal, but this was different. It was a 290 overs game which still lost 15+ overs. Not only Kiwis made up 60 overs by batting at 5+ and effectively won a 3 Day Test in 7 sessions. Being all out inside 60 overs when requirement was to bat for around 90 is not only irresponsible or incompetence, rather humiliating surrender - there was no heart, head or will power to survive.
 
A hostile spell of fast bowling from Neil Wagner (5/45), admirably aided by his fellow left-arm seamer Trent Boult (4/52), took New Zealand to an innings victory on the final day of the second Test in Wellington.

The win was all the more impressive considering that rain washed out the first two days of play. Bangladesh resumed the final day needing another 141 runs to make New Zealand bat again with seven wickets in hand. With the ball losing its shine and New Zealand without their skipper Kane Williamson and first-choice wicketkeeper BJ Watling – neither player took to the field due to injury – it was no simple task for the hosts to win the game, let alone do so by the lunch interval.

Watling’s place behind the stumps was taken by the uncapped 27-year-old gloveman Peter Bocock, who has just three first-class appearances to his name. To his credit, in an alien environment, Bocock acquitted himself well throughout and didn’t display any obvious signs of lingering nerves.

Bangladesh, through Soumya Sarkar and Mohammad Mithun, actually started the morning reasonably comfortably. On 112/3, having resumed the morning on 80/3, they would have harboured realistic aspirations of if not batting out the day, ensuring that New Zealand had to bat for the second time in the Test.

Then Trent Boult – who has now taken 23 wickets in his last three Tests – bowled a pearl of a delivery to dismiss the set Sarkar for 28. The ball, honing in for the left-hander’s off-stump, found Sarkar’s edge and subsequently provided yesterday’s double-centurion Ross Taylor with the simplest of chances in the slip cordon.

From that point, it was Neil Wagner who became the tormentor-in-chief. Running in with his characteristic hostility and forgoing the common practice of line and length bowling, Wagner stuck to his plan of short-pitched bowling aimed at the batsmen’s body with impressive regularity and conviction.

Mithun (47) was his first victim, pulling a well-directed short delivery to stand-in skipper Tim Southee at leg gully. It was a good catch by Southee and vindication of his original field setting as captain. Liton Das came and went for one, recklessly pulling Wagner to Boult on the fine leg boundary.

Wagner was then too much for Taijul Islam who fended yet another short delivery to Tom Latham at silly point. Bangladesh’s captain Mahmudullah and Mustafizur Rahim then offered a short period of entertaining resistance. Mustafizur registered two sixes on his way to a career-best score of 16 while Mahmudullah scored an excellent 67 off 69 balls.

In the end, Boult and Wagner sealed the game and the series for their team. The pair of left-arm seamers took combined figures of 9/97 and ensured that New Zealand won the game with plenty of time left to spare. Ross Taylor was the worthy recipient of the Player of the Match award for his 200 in New Zealand’s only innings of the game. The series continues with the third Test Christchurch, which begins from Saturday, 16 March.

https://www.icc-cricket.com/news/1094651
 
In NZ last day is typically the best day to bat on. BD is still treated like associate side outside their comfort zone. The day when Rahim, Shakib, Tamim call it quits, they will be back to square one.
 
Utter shambolic performance - this is not only unacceptable but rather out classing, not being belong to the level.

Losing by innings is not a big deal, but this was different. It was a 290 overs game which still lost 15+ overs. Not only Kiwis made up 60 overs by batting at 5+ and effectively won a 3 Day Test in 7 sessions. Being all out inside 60 overs when requirement was to bat for around 90 is not only irresponsible or incompetence, rather humiliating surrender - there was no heart, head or will power to survive.

what is the reason? i mean bengalis love their cricket, why no good batsman or bowlers?
 
This is the last time for the next 10 years that Bangladesh will be invited outside Asia (except WI). I am disappointed by their mediocrity, they're still a minnow.
 
This should be the most embarrassing defeat for Bdesh but then it's a competitive list for them
 
No offence but you have a large population but still you've been unable to produce a world beater of a team in your whole cricketing history. In other sports as well you're no where to be seen.
What's the reason?
I'm not trynna be offensive it's a geniune question.

My theory is that Large population will not necessarily guarantee success, similar to how China sucks in football. At the end of the day team plays with 11 players only on the field.

It’s all about the culture. I still do not believe Cricketing culture is fully there in Bangladesh. For example, when I last visited there almost all the kids follows football and knows everything about the EPL. We used to be a pretty decent team back in those days in football.

I believe test cricket is properly followed in SENA plus WI. That is they try to take wickets through pace bowling. However, subcontinent teams added different dimensions to cricket with their spin bowling.
 
Utter shambolic performance - this is not only unacceptable but rather out classing, not being belong to the level.

Losing by innings is not a big deal, but this was different. It was a 290 overs game which still lost 15+ overs. Not only Kiwis made up 60 overs by batting at 5+ and effectively won a 3 Day Test in 7 sessions. Being all out inside 60 overs when requirement was to bat for around 90 is not only irresponsible or incompetence, rather humiliating surrender - there was no heart, head or will power to survive.

You and I both agreed that playing more test cricket in tough conditions will help the team improve. However I do not see any notable improvements. If anything we are getting worse with each match. If we didn’t drop Taylor twice most likely game wouldve ended in one and half days. This is completely unacceptable. Also, would be interested to know team management plan, goals, target for the World Cup. I will bet it will playing in Ireland and targeting one upset in the WC lol.
 
My theory is that Large population will not necessarily guarantee success, similar to how China sucks in football. At the end of the day team plays with 11 players only on the field.

ItÂ’s all about the culture. I still do not believe Cricketing culture is fully there in Bangladesh. For example, when I last visited there almost all the kids follows football and knows everything about the EPL. We used to be a pretty decent team back in those days in football.

I believe test cricket is properly followed in SENA plus WI. That is they try to take wickets through pace bowling. However, subcontinent teams added different dimensions to cricket with their spin bowling.

Test cricket is properly followed in all countries except Bangladesh. West Indies has won a test in England and UAE. Sri Lanka has beaten SA in SA. It's just Bangladesh who are expected to get destroyed away.

If Bangladesh wants to be invited to SENA, they must win a test or two there. You guys are not a new team anymore, 20 years is a long time.
 
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