4th ODI: New Zealand v West Indies at Auckland - Highlights
1st T20I, 26 December 2008 - Ross Taylor of New Zealand was the highest scorer for his team with 63 runs in 77 balls. New Zealand batted first to score 155-7 in the first T20I in Auckland, New Zealand.


West Indies responded with 155-8 after opener Chris Gayle led a captain's knock of 67 runs in 60 balls, complete with five fours and five sixes to tie the score.
Auckland: New Zealand look the stronger side ahead of the fourth ODI in Auckland after their demolition of the tourists at Wellington on Wednesday.
Jesse Ryder's latest misadventure - he missed a team meeting and practice on Thursday after a late night of drinking, and will also miss the match on Saturday.
Jacob Oram has also been left out due to his injury, meaning Grant Elliott will be used a fifth bowler in Ryder's absence. The bowling department looks good otherwise and the only casualty could be Jeetan Patel if the Auckland pitch turns out to be more seamer-friendly.
For West Indies, Chris Gayle has failed to spark in the ODIs after being the opposition's bogeyman in the Tests and Twenty20 series. Ramnaresh Sarwan steered them to victory in the shortened contest in Christchurch
, but a tame performance in the last game was rightly termed as "terrible" by Gayle. The steady Shivnarine Chanderpaul was tipped by Gayle to open after the Wellington debacle, but that would leave the inexperienced batsmen with the task of tackling Daniel Vettori.
An angry Chris Gayle is perhaps not what the New Zealanders would hope to confront on Saturday. Gayle was not too pleased after the hammering in Wellington, as well as the batsmen's failures to cope with Vettori, and perhaps it's time for the captain to make a statement. If he manages to see off the seamers, watch out for how he handles his opposition counterpart.

1st T20I, 26 December 2008 - Ross Taylor of New Zealand was the highest scorer for his team with 63 runs in 77 balls. New Zealand batted first to score 155-7 in the first T20I in Auckland, New Zealand.


West Indies responded with 155-8 after opener Chris Gayle led a captain's knock of 67 runs in 60 balls, complete with five fours and five sixes to tie the score.
Auckland: New Zealand look the stronger side ahead of the fourth ODI in Auckland after their demolition of the tourists at Wellington on Wednesday.
Jesse Ryder's latest misadventure - he missed a team meeting and practice on Thursday after a late night of drinking, and will also miss the match on Saturday.
Jacob Oram has also been left out due to his injury, meaning Grant Elliott will be used a fifth bowler in Ryder's absence. The bowling department looks good otherwise and the only casualty could be Jeetan Patel if the Auckland pitch turns out to be more seamer-friendly.
For West Indies, Chris Gayle has failed to spark in the ODIs after being the opposition's bogeyman in the Tests and Twenty20 series. Ramnaresh Sarwan steered them to victory in the shortened contest in Christchurch
, but a tame performance in the last game was rightly termed as "terrible" by Gayle. The steady Shivnarine Chanderpaul was tipped by Gayle to open after the Wellington debacle, but that would leave the inexperienced batsmen with the task of tackling Daniel Vettori.
An angry Chris Gayle is perhaps not what the New Zealanders would hope to confront on Saturday. Gayle was not too pleased after the hammering in Wellington, as well as the batsmen's failures to cope with Vettori, and perhaps it's time for the captain to make a statement. If he manages to see off the seamers, watch out for how he handles his opposition counterpart.
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