The New Zealand Herald

Neesham joins batting elite

Lefthander writes his name in the record books with centuries in his first two tests

- David Leggat

Sporting careers, for better or worse, can turn on details which seem small at the time. Think Brian McKechnie, who only got on the field against Wales in Cardiff in 1978 after fullback Clive Currie was injured in the opening minutes. If not for that, McKechnie would not have kicked the winning penalty, arguably still the most dramatic in All Black test history in the dying moments, which enshrined his name in All Black folklore.

Or Greg Loveridge, the Central Districts legspinner who, on debut against Zimbabwe in Hamilton in 1996, broke a finger before even bowling a ball, and was never sighted near a New Zealand team again.

When New Zealand decided not to risk legspinner Ish Sodhi for the second test against India at the Basin Reserve in February, they turned to a fivestrong fast-medium attack, and gave a debut to allrounder Jimmy Neesham.

The assertive lefthander responded, not so much with the ball, but with a memorable 137 not out, the highest score by a debutant at No 8 in test history.

You may not remember much about the innings — as you wouldn’t about Virat Kohli’s fabulous century on the final afternoon of that match either — because of Brendon McCullum’s triple century heroics.

Neesham might then have missed selection for the first test against the West Indies had his allround rival Corey Anderson not damaged a neck muscle in the leadup.

The suspicion is Anderson, rated the better batting allrounder, would have been preferred, although you won’t get New Zealand team management saying as much. After all, you don’t rain on a teammate’s parade.

In time, might that neck injury come to be seen as a prophetic twist in the tale of the two tyros with the cricket world at their feet?

Now, having become just the eighth player to have scored centuries in his first two tests, Neesham

For the latest from today’s third day of the

first test. will be hard to shift, certainly in the short term. Fitting both players into the same XI is difficult, but not impossible, as that Basin test showed.

After his century in his third test innings in Dhaka last October, subsequent thunderous limited-overs deeds, and a bulging Indian Premier League deal with the Mumbai Indians, Anderson now finds himself potentiall­y on the outer looking in for the remainder of the West Indies tour.

Neesham, having put on 179 with McCullum against India, shared a 201-run stand with the gritty, adhesive wicketkeep­er BJ Watling yesterday at Sabina Park, 19 shy of the sixth wicket record in the Caribbean, by Glenn Turner and Ken Wadsworth on the same ground 32 years ago.

Neesham yesterday once again demonstrat­ed an ability to pick his moments to attack, and was comfortabl­e lofting down the ground to help lift a pedestrian run rate on a snailpaced pitch.

Of the eight, only Neesham, Alvin Kallichara­n, Sourav Ganguly and Rohit Sharma got their centuries in consecutiv­e innings; Neesham is alone in getting his in different countries and against different countries.

First McCullum’s triple hundred, now this. Record-setting days to savour. Newcastle front-rower Kade Snowden has been suspended for two weeks for a pair of high tackles in his side’s NRL loss to the Wests Tigers on Sunday. Snowden took the early guilty plea to a grade-two careless high tackle on Curtis Sironen and a grade-one charge for the same offence on Bodene Thompson. Canterbury’s Sam Kasiano and the Roosters’ Dylan Napa are free to play after they opted for early pleas to separate dangerous contact charges. The Black Ferns beat Canada 16-8 yesterday at Tauranga Domain in the third test in the Internatio­nal Women's Rugby Series. The Black Ferns play Canada in the last test of the series on Saturday at Whakatane's Rugby Park.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Jimmy Neesham is alone in getting his centuries in different countries and against different countries.
Picture / AP Jimmy Neesham is alone in getting his centuries in different countries and against different countries.

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