The New Zealand Herald

Canterbury still in control

Grip on Plunket Shield silverware tightens for Cantabs as challenger­s forced to struggle

- Kris Shannon

Canterbury’s grip on domestic cricket’s Plunket Shield has tightened halfway through the final round, with the leaders’ nearest challenger­s labouring in their late bids to steal the silverware.

Auckland and Northern Districts required outright wins this week to claim the title, but both will need to spark revivals today to keep alive their faint prospects.

In a match plagued by foul weather, Auckland yesterday faltered with the bat and were luckless with the ball in Napier, allowing Central Districts to take control of the clash after two days.

Beginning on 57-3, Colin Munro’s half-century was the only innings of significan­ce as Navin Patel took 5-71 and Auckland stumbled to 200-9 declared. The hosts then advanced to 65-1 in reply, leaving them trailing by 135 runs and ensuring Auckland need quick wickets this morning.

The task facing Northern Districts appears even more monumental, after Anaru Kitchen blasted his maiden first-class double-century to put Otago in charge in Dunedin.

After bringing up his fourth ton of the season while surpassing his previous highest score on day one, Kitchen started yesterday morning on 141 and continued to flay Northern Districts’ attack all around University Oval.

The No 6 raced to 200 from just 233 balls before falling shortly after registerin­g the milestone, captured by Ish Sodhi on 207 as Otago declared on 432-8. In reply, the visitors enjoyed none of Kitchen’s success, ending the day on 162-5 and 270 runs in arrears, with Dean Brownlie’s 87 the only real bright spot.

All of which would have left Canterbury feeling rather comfortabl­e in Christchur­ch.

The leaders are facing a battle of their own to earn victory over Wellington but, needing only to match their pursuers’ results, they would have been content with a position of parity at the halfway point.

After some lower-order resistance from Todd Astle (70) and Logan van Beek (66) helped Canterbury avoid embarrassm­ent and eventually reach 197, the hosts reduced Wellington to 117-5 at stumps to leave the match in the balance, if not entirely relevant.

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