Flynn shores up shaky top order
Friday, 12 December 2008
The changes made by New Zealand's new coach, Andy Moles, in the wake of the batting disasters in Australia ensured the team held the edge over West Indies on a truncated opening day at the University Oval.
His decision to push Daniel Flynn to No 3 and slot Jesse Ryder down at No 5 proved a masterstroke of sorts as both managed half-centuries before bad light forced an early finish with more than 16 overs remaining.
Flynn was one of the few performers in Australia; his strength then was his durability at the crease but Thursday he revealed a classier side to his batting, looking to push the scoring and peppering the off side with boundaries. A hundred was there for the taking against a bowling attack lacking penetration but he fell - to an umpire referral - five short of it. Ryder played his part in a stand of 61 with Flynn and remained unbeaten on 54 before the players walked off the field.
The consensus before the match was that whoever won the toss would bowl. But with clear skies and a strong breeze drying things out, and with the brown but grassy pitch offering little to the bowlers, the brains trust changed their mind and Daniel Vettori's choice was generally approved of.
As if inspired by the Obama theme of 'change', New Zealand reassessed themselves after the 2-0 drubbing in Australia. Tim McIntosh was brought in as an opener for Aaron Redmond but New Zealand's 18th opening pair in the last 36 Tests had put on 10 runs when Jamie How perished off an uppish slash to point.
It was a blessing in disguise as it brought Flynn early to the crease and his positive energy compensated for McIntosh's nervous start. McIntosh took 38 balls to get off the mark and when he did it was with a desperate slash an inch over the hands of gully. He survived more than a few alarms before finally calming his nerves with a sweet pull. His confidence thereafter built visibly, although he looked technically flawed against anything aimed at his head, taking his eyes off the ball and trusting in swipes. -Cricinfo
His decision to push Daniel Flynn to No 3 and slot Jesse Ryder down at No 5 proved a masterstroke of sorts as both managed half-centuries before bad light forced an early finish with more than 16 overs remaining.
Flynn was one of the few performers in Australia; his strength then was his durability at the crease but Thursday he revealed a classier side to his batting, looking to push the scoring and peppering the off side with boundaries. A hundred was there for the taking against a bowling attack lacking penetration but he fell - to an umpire referral - five short of it. Ryder played his part in a stand of 61 with Flynn and remained unbeaten on 54 before the players walked off the field.
The consensus before the match was that whoever won the toss would bowl. But with clear skies and a strong breeze drying things out, and with the brown but grassy pitch offering little to the bowlers, the brains trust changed their mind and Daniel Vettori's choice was generally approved of.
As if inspired by the Obama theme of 'change', New Zealand reassessed themselves after the 2-0 drubbing in Australia. Tim McIntosh was brought in as an opener for Aaron Redmond but New Zealand's 18th opening pair in the last 36 Tests had put on 10 runs when Jamie How perished off an uppish slash to point.
It was a blessing in disguise as it brought Flynn early to the crease and his positive energy compensated for McIntosh's nervous start. McIntosh took 38 balls to get off the mark and when he did it was with a desperate slash an inch over the hands of gully. He survived more than a few alarms before finally calming his nerves with a sweet pull. His confidence thereafter built visibly, although he looked technically flawed against anything aimed at his head, taking his eyes off the ball and trusting in swipes. -Cricinfo