The Press

Hola stops Stags’ march as two matches wiped

- BEN STRANG

Cyclone Hola will be receiving mixed reviews from rivals in the Plunket Shield.

For the Auckland Aces and the Wellington Firebirds, Hola delivered a five-star performanc­e when she was needed most, ending what looked a certain Central Stags victory at the Eden Park Outer Oval.

But for the visiting Stags, Hola was a horror show.

With just two wickets needed for victory, the rains came on Monday morning and washed Central’s chances of victory away.

At the end of the third day in Auckland, the Aces were 152-5 and knew they needed 168 more to avoid an innings defeat at the hands of the Stags.

Ajaz Patel was in spell binding form, having nabbed 5-42 in the first innings and 3-31 in the second. He was the joker to Auckland’s Aces.

While Patel started the fourth day as he’d finished the third, by removing Ben Horne and Stuart Meaker in the space of four overs and claiming 10 wickets for the match, the Aces switched games and played their get out of jail free card.

Hola arrived around midday, forcing the teams off the field with Auckland on 181-8, 139 behind Central’s score, and didn’t allow them to get back on.

The Stags did still move top of the Plunket Shield table with the draw, but they could have had quite the lead with a dominant win.

They also know a Wellington fightback against Otago in Dunedin isn’t off the table, and could see their competitio­n lead last just one day.

At Eden Park Outer Oval, Auckland (day four): Central Stags 524 drew with Auckland Aces 204 and 181-8 (Sean Solia 59, Michael Guptill-Bunce 33; Patel 5-39)

Wellington looked on track for a mammoth second innings as Michael Papps scored 128 from 277 balls, pushing the Firebirds into a healthy second innings lead.

But when Papps fell with the score on 271-3 in the 96th over, Wellington collapsed to 309 all out and a lead of 215.

Four Wellington wickets fell with the score on 275, as Fraser Colson, Logan van Beek, Devon Conway and Jeetan Patel all fell in the space of six balls to Michael Rae and Jacob Duffy.

While Peter Younghusba­nd showed some late resistance with 17 not out from 19 balls, the tail tumbled and Wellington’s promise of a big total was obliterate­d.

At least they could smile at the weather forecast in Auckland.

Rae was the chief destroyer with a spell of 5-18 from eight overs, starting with Papps who was caught on the deep square boundary. Van Beek and Iain McPeake took a wicket each to have Otago at 62-2 at stumps, needing 153 more runs on the final day to secure victory.

At University Oval, Dunedin (day three): Wellington Firebirds 194 and 309 (Michael Papps 128, S Murdoch 48; Michael Rae 5-18) met Otago Volts 289 and 62-2 (R Nicol 27no)

At Whangarei’s Cobham Oval, not a ball was bowled Monday as Northern Districts and Canterbury ended up in a rain-affected draw.

Northern had been in good position to press for victory against Canterbury, needing eight wickets to remove the visitors before chasing what could have been a modest target.

Daniel Flynn and Henry Cooper had started day three at 81-0, but were quickly into their work as they put on another 197 runs in quick time before Flynn was dismissed for 157. Cooper followed seven overs later for 136.

Their 278-run stand broke the Northern Districts record for highest opening stand by four runs. The previous best of 274 was set by BJ Watling and Brad Wilson at the same ground almost seven years ago to the day on March 10, 2011 as Northern chased down 385 in 87 overs to beat Wellington by nine wickets.

At Cobham Oval Whangarei (day four): Canterbury 193 and 141-2 (Chad Bowes

93) drew with Northern Districts

409-4 dec (Daniel Flynn 157, Henry Cooper 136, Bharat Popli

65no)

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