White
Ferns 274-5 (Sara McGlashan 71, Sophie Devine 45, Katie Perkins 45) beat the
West Indies Women 180-9 (Shemaine Campbell 45, Stafanie Taylor 32, Holly
Huddleston 5-36) by 94 runs
The White
Ferns have taken an unassailable 2-0 lead against the West Indies Women, after
beating the visitors by 94 runs in the second One Day International in Lincoln.
Anchored by
Sara McGlashan with 71 and aided by some heavy hitting from Rachel Priest at
the death, the White Ferns posted an imposing 274 for five in the first
innings. The West Indies response lacked a big partnership and after 50 overs
they were restricted to 180 for nine. Holly Huddleston was the chief destroyer
with the ball for the White Ferns, taking her maiden five-wicket-bag.
Having lost
the toss and been asked to bat, the White Ferns suffered an early hiccup when
captain Suzie Bates was dismissed for seven. However, the pair of Samantha
Curtis and Sara McGlashan steadied the ship for the hosts, putting on 98 for
the second wicket.
Curtis,
playing in her second match, gave away few chances on her way to 42, but was
run-out thanks to an athletic bit of fielding from Shemaine Campbell.
Thankfully it didn’t take long for her replacement, Sophie Devine (45), to
establish herself at the crease.
Even
McGlashan’s dismissal in the 35th over didn’t slow the White Ferns
down, with Katie Perkins teaming up with Devine to put on 62 for the fourth
wicket. Devine’s knock came from 40 balls and included six fours, before ending
when she was caught on the boundary.
With eight
overs remaining the White Ferns were 196 for four, but a flurry of boundaries
from Perkins (45* off 34) and Priest (40* from 19) would add a further 78 to
their total. Priest in particular was in formidable touch, crunching five
consecutive boundaries at one point.
Two run-outs
hurt the home side, while three West Indies bowlers took a wicket apiece.
With such a
high target it was going to take a special individual effort to topple the
White Ferns total, but the bowlers did a good job of pegging the West Indies
back whenever they began to look threatening.
The key
wicket was that of Stafanie Taylor, who looked dangerous en route to 32, before
driving one to McGlashan who took a sharp catch.
Shemaine
Campbell (45) loomed as their last hope, but in the 33rd over the 21
year-old fell victim to Huddleston, who almost singlehandedly destroyed the
West Indies middle-order. In the end the 26-year-old finished with impressive
figures of five for 36 from 10 overs.
The White
Ferns will have a chance to go for the clean-sweep on Wednesday.