Mitchell’s courageous century seals tight New Zealand win over surging Windies
Ben McLeod
caribbean national weekly|17-11-2025
Daryl Mitchell, battling through visible discomfort, crafted a tenacious century that proved the difference as New Zealand edged the West Indies by seven runs in a tense first ODI at Christchurch on Sunday.
His measured yet forceful 119 anchored the hosts’ total of 269-7 on a difficult surface, setting the platform for a dramatic finale.
A late West Indies charge falls just short.
The West Indies mustered a spirited surge in the closing overs, surging to 262-6 as Sherfane Rutherford (55) and a blazing, unbeaten 38 off 24 balls from Justin Greaves kept the chase alive. Their clean striking shifted the pressure squarely onto the home side, and when Romario Shepherd launched a six in the final over to leave nine needed from the last two deliveries, the contest hung in the balance.
Seamer Jacob Duffy, entrusted with the match, held his nerve. His composure under fire sealed New Zealand’s narrow escape and delivered a 1-0 lead heading into Wednesday’s second ODI in Napier.
Mitchell masters a treacherous surface.e
On a pitch offering inconsistent bounce and little fluency, Mitchell’s seventh ODI century stood out as an innings of grit and calculation. New Zealand were reeling at 24-2 after Rachin Ravindra and Will Young fell to consecutive deliveries from Matthew Forde, bringing the world’s No. 3-ranked ODI batsman to the crease far earlier than planned.
Devon Conway added a steady 49, but no other batter found rhythm on the testing track. Mitchellfavouringng the leg side, carved out 12 fours and two sixes, one of them a muscular pull off Jayden Seales that brought up his hundred in the 46th over. Seales eventually dismissed him, caught in the deep during the final over, en route to an excellent 3-41.
Mitchell was unable to field due to a groin issue.
Hope calls for greater responsibility .ity
The West Indies chase never quite found sustained momentum at the top, despite a 60-run stand between Alick Athanaze (29) and Keacy Carty (32) that consumed 18 overs. Captain Shai Hope contributed a brisk 37, but his dismissal came at a critical juncture.
Reflecting afterwards, he urged more substantial contributions from his frontline batters.
“I would be very critical, the batters need to step up a bit more, especially at the top, myself included. I got out at a very crucial time there.”
He said. “A few of us need to go a bit bigger.”
Jamieson leads the hosts’ response.
Kyle Jamieson delivered New Zealand’s most incisive bowling performance, taking 3-52 and providing key breakthroughs that kept the West Indies behind the rate until their late surge. Yet even his efforts were nearly undone by the visitors’ final assault, which only fell short due to Duffy’s calm final over.
With the series delicately poised and both sides aware of their vulnerabilities, Wednesday’s second ODI promises equal intensity and perhaps fewer margins for error.