Taranaki Daily News

Jesse Ryder ton upsets Canty

- WAYNE MARTIN

A superb Jesse Ryder century and some resilient Central Stags batsmen have opened the door for Auckland to chase Plunket Shield glory.

Competitio­n leaders Canterbury had been chasing an outright result against Central at Nelson’s Saxton Oval on Friday in an attempt to secure this season’s title with a round remaining.

But with Ryder leading the charge, Central eventually reached their target at 349-6 late in the day’s final session to beat Canterbury by four wickets and claim their first win of the four-day series.

Ryder finished the match unbeaten on 109, having faced 187 balls and hit 14 fours and a six.

Instead, Canterbury now head into the final round against Wellington in Christchur­ch with their 19-point lead reduced to just eight following second-placed Auckland’s eight-wicket win over Otago on Thursday. Coincident­ally, Central host Auckland in Napier now with some momentum behind them.

Canterbury had predictabl­y declared at their overnight score of 273-8, leaving Central requiring 347 runs off a minimum 96 overs for victory.

With Central in early trouble at 1-1 in just the second over, Mitch Renwick and George Worker effectivel­y maintained a manageable asking rate of around 3.5 runs per over, with a cover-driven boundary off offspinner Tim Johnston taking Worker to his half century off 79 balls.

But leg-spinner Todd Astle broke their 93-run stand when he trapped Renwick lbw for 37 at 94-2, leaving Worker and Will Young to carry the score through to 102-2 at lunch with Central still needing a further 245 runs for victory.

Canterbury’s hopes soared when Astle removed Worker with

the first delivery after lunch for 53, Young eventually falling just three runs short of a half century to end a profitable 82-run fourth-wicket partnershi­p with Ryder.

Central headed to tea still 135 runs shy of their target at 215-5 with 35 overs remaining in the final session. Dane Cleaver’s departure for a well-compiled 48, bowled by Astle at 296-6, brought Canterbury right back into the mix with Central still requiring 51 runs.

It ended another critical 91-run stand although with Ryder still batting confidentl­y, Central retained the controllin­g hand.

Ryder clipped two runs off seamer Logan van Beek to eventually reach his 23rd first class century with 19 runs still needed for the win.

Adam Milne helped see the victory through, the right-hander pulling van Beek for six to finish 29 not out with still 10 overs remaining.

 ?? PHOTO: PHOTOSPORT ?? Central Stags batsman Jesse Ryder smashes the ball through midwicket.
PHOTO: PHOTOSPORT Central Stags batsman Jesse Ryder smashes the ball through midwicket.

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