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New Zealand national cricket team
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The New Zealand cricket team, also known as the Black Caps, played their first Test in 1929-30 against England in Christchurch, New Zealand, becoming the fifth Test nation. It took the team until 1955-56 to win a Test, against the West Indies at Eden Park in Auckland. They played their first ODI in the 1972-73 season against Pakistan in Christchurch.
The current captain is Stephen Fleming, who follows in the footsteps of former greats such as John R. Reid, Geoff Howarth and Martin Crowe. Stephen Fleming is the Black Caps' most successful captain, having led New Zealand to 28 Test victories (to December 2006), more than double that of any other captain.
The New Zealand cricket team became known as the Black Caps in January 1998, after its sponsor at the time,
Clear Communications, held a competition to choose a name for the team.
Contents
- 1 Key Players
- 2 Current Test record (March 2006)
- 3 Current Squad
- 3.1 Opening Batsmen
- 3.2 Middle Order Batsmen
- 3.3 Wicket-keepers
- 3.4 All-rounders
- 3.5 Fast bowlers
- 3.6 Spin bowlers
- 3.7 Starting XI
- 4 First Test series wins
- 5 First Test match wins
- 6 Tournament History
- 6.1 World Cup
- 6.2 ICC Champions Trophy
- 6.3 ICC Knockout
- 6.4 Commonwealth Games
- 6.5 World Championship of Cricket
- 6.6 Austral-Asia Cup
- 7 All rounders
- 8 Tournament Victories
- 9 Highest Test innings total
- 10 Lowest Test Innings total
- 11 Highest individual Test innings
- 12 Highest Wicket Stands
- 13 Largest Test Victory Margins
- 14 World Records
- 15 Notable
- 16 See also
- 17 References
- 18 External links
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Key Players
Current Test record (March 2006)
| Won | 61
|
| Lost | 128
|
| Drawn | 138
|
| Played
| 327
|
Current Squad
Players who have been awarded a central contract for 2007 are in bold.
Opening Batsmen
- Stephen Fleming (captain) (left-hand bat)
- Lou Vincent (right-hand bat)
- Jamie How (right-hand bat)
- James Marshall (right-hand bat)
- Matthew Sinclair (right-hand bat)
Middle Order Batsmen
- Craig McMillan (right-hand bat)
- Peter Fulton (right-hand bat)
- Ross Taylor (right-hand bat)
- Hamish Marshall (right-hand bat)
Wicket-keepers
- Brendon McCullum (right-hand bat)
All-rounders
- Jacob Oram (left-hand bat) (right-arm fast-medium)
- Scott Styris (right-hand bat) (right-arm medium-fast)
Fast bowlers
- Shane Bond (right-arm fast)
- James Franklin (left-arm fast-medium)
- Chris Martin (right-arm fast-medium)
- Kyle Mills (right-arm fast-medium)
- Mark Gillespie (right-arm fast-medium)
- Michael Mason (right-arm fast)
Spin bowlers
- Jeetan Patel (right-arm off-spin)
- Daniel Vettori (left-hand bat) (left-arm orthodox)
Starting XI
The following lineup is the preferred XI and the squad used during the 2007 Cricket World Cup.
1. Lou Vincent
2. Stephen Fleming (C)
3. Ross Taylor
4. Scott Styris
5. Craig McMillan
6. Jacob Oram
7. Brendan McCullum
8. Daniel Vettori
9. James Franklin
10.Mark Gillespie
11. Shane Bond
First Test series wins
First Test match wins
Tournament History
- 1998: Quarter Finals
- 2000: Won
1985: Fourth
- 1986: Semi Finals
- 1990: Semi Finals
- 1994: Semi Finals
All rounders
New Zealand is one of only two Test playing countries (the other is South Africa) to have two players who have achieved the allrounder’s double of 3000 Test runs and 200 Test wickets. The current (2007) list is:
Tournament Victories
The Black Caps won the ICC Knock-Out Trophy vs India Nairobi Gymkhana Club Nairobi Kenya 2000.
2003 Bank Alfala Series Trophy held in Sri Lanka [New Zealand,Pakistan,Sri Lanka]
2004 NatWest Series Trophy held in England (West Indies/England/New Zealand).
2005 Videocon TriSeries held in Zimbabwe (India/Zimbabwe/New Zealand).
Highest Test innings total
Away
Home
Lowest Test Innings total
Away
Home
Highest individual Test innings
Away
Home
Highest Wicket Stands
§ The highest wicket stands for all Test nations.
Largest Test Victory Margins
| Margin | vs | Venue | Year
|
| Innings and 294 runs | Zimbabwe | Harare | 2005-2006
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| Innings and 185 runs | Pakistan | Hamilton | 2000-2001
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| Innings and 132 runs | England | Christchurch | 1983-1984
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| Innings and 105 runs | West Indies | Wellington | 1999-2000
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| Innings and 99 runs | Pakistan | Auckland | 1984-1985
|
| Innings and 74 runs | Bangladesh | Wellington | 2001-2002
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| Innings and 61 runs | Sri Lanka | Colombo | 1983-1984
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| Innings and 52 runs | Bangladesh | Hamilton | 2001-2002
|
World Records
- Richard Hadlee, one of New Zealand and the world's best all-rounders, took the world record for most Test wickets (374) vs India at Bangalore in 1988. He lost the record to Kapil Dev. Hadlee was the first bowler to reach 400 Test wickets vs India at Christchurch in 1990
- Andrew Jones and Martin Crowe held the highest ever 3rd-wicket partnership in Tests which at the time was the highest partnership for any wicket. [3].
- Brian Hastings and Richard Collinge together scored 151 runs for the highest ever 10th-wicket partnership against Pakistan in 1973. [4].
- Nathan Astle scored Test cricket's fastest ever double century versus England Christchurch 2002 [5]. He scored 200 off 153 balls with the second hundred coming off just 39 deliveries. He was eventually out for 222 — the dreaded double Nelson. He knocked the first hundred off 114 balls. Astle smashed the record by 59 balls, previously held by Adam Gilchrist Australia vs South Africa Johannesburg 2002).
- Geoff Allott holds the record for the longest time taken to score a duck [6]. South Africa Auckland 1999. He faced 77 balls in 101 minutes for his zero score.
- Danny Morrison held another "unwanted" record for the most ducks in Test cricket — (24). He lost the record to Courtney Walsh.
- Chris Cairns and his father Lance Cairns are one of the two father-son combination to each claim 100 Test wickets, South Africa's Peter and Shaun Pollock being the other.
- Chris Cairns held the record for the most Test sixes [7]. He passed Viv Richards record of 84 (vs England, Lord's, London, 2004) and retired from Test cricket with 87. He has since been passed by both Adam Gilchrist (the current record holder) and Brian Lara.
- Chris Harris is the only New Zealand cricketer to have taken 200 wickets in ODIs. (vs England, Lord's, London, 2004). He is only the second player in ODIs to complete the 4000 run / 200 wicket double. (The other is Sri Lankan Sanath Jayasuriya). He holds the record for the most ODI caught and bowled dismissals, with 29.[1]
- Fast bowler Shane Bond holds the best strike rate in the history of One Day International cricket of 26.5 (one player out for every 26.5 balls bowled) [8].
- The New Zealand team holds the dubious honour of the record for the most consecutive Test series played without a win - 30 series between 1929-30 and 1969-70 (40 years), comfortably ahead of Bangladesh on 16 series. [9]
Notable
- New Zealand dismissed Zimbabwe (Harare 2005) twice in the same day for totals of 59 and 99. Zimbabwe became only the second team (after India Manchester 1952) to be dismissed twice in the same day. The whole Test was completed inside two days.
- Daniel Vettori scored NZ's fastest Test century. (vs Zimbabwe Harare 2005). Vettori needed only 82 balls to reach the 100 mark.
- In the same match, he became the third NZ cricketer (after Richard Hadlee and Chris Cairns) to take more than 200 Test wickets.
- Lou Vincent holds the record for the highest one-day cricket innings by a New Zealander of 172 (vs Zimbabwe Bulawayo 2005). The previous best was Glenn Turner 171 not out (vs East Africa Birmingham 1975). Vincent and captain Stephen Fleming broke the New Zealand one-day opening partnership record against all countries. Their total of 204 beat Fleming and Nathan Astle's 193 (vs Pakistan Dunedin 2000-2001). The team total of 397 was just one run short of the then record one-day total of 398 (Sri Lanka vs Kenya Kandy 1996).
- Brendon McCullum scored the fastest World Cup fifty (off 20 balls) for New Zealand against Canada, beating Mark Boucher's 21-ball record set against the Netherlands six days earlier.
See also
References
- ^ Winning without losing a wicket, and Kumble's record. Cricinfo (January 12, 2004). Retrieved on 2007-02-21.