Holder, Dowrich drive West Indies into the ascendancy

West Indies 374 for 7 (Dowrich 75*, Holder 71, Raza 5-82) lead Zimbabwe 326 (Masakadza 147, Raza 80, Moor 52, Roach 3-44, Gabriel 2-64) by 48 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

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Sikandar Raza cut through West Indies to register his first five-wicket haul in professional cricket, but Jason Holder and Shane Dowrich combined to put on an unbroken 144-run eighth-wicket stand to give the visitors a 48-run first innings lead at stumps on day three.

After Kieran Powell fell for 90, West Indies’ middle order collapsed to Raza’s offspin as the visitors slipped to 230 for 7, before being put back in front with a stand characterized by controlled aggression. At the close, West Indies had put themselves well in front, with Dowrich sitting on a career-best 75 not out.

Raza’s success aside, it was a tough day for Zimbabwe. A stiff ankle stopped Solomon Mire from bowling for most of the day, Graeme Cremer struggled for rhythm and Tendai Chisoro bowled well without any luck. The hosts missed five chances in the field and an injudicious use of the DRS ultimately allowed Holder and Dowrich’s partnership to flourish.

Zimbabwe used their last review attempting to reverse an lbw decision against Powell despite the fact that he’d been struck well outside the line. When Raza had a plumb leg before shout, with Holder on 11, turned down, they could do nothing about it. As it turned out, he didn’t offer another chance.

Dowrich was the first to fifty, off 85 balls, and Holder followed him soon after, off 92. Their stand was just the third in West Indies history to pass 100 for the eighth wicket. As the partnership flourished, even Raza came in for some damage. Dowrich drove him repeatedly through the covers, while Holder stepped out to clout a huge six over long on.

Apart from those boundaries, and a couple of tired long hops late in the day, Raza’s control of line and length was exemplary and his repeated strikes lifted Zimbabwe. They were in need of some pepping up when Powell and nightwatchman Devendra Bishoo stretched their partnership beyond fifty this morning. With Cremer struggling and edges flying between fielders or dropping in front of them in the first session, Powell eased past fifty from 133 deliveries, and slowly began to assert himself.

When a chance eventually did come, via the top edge of a Bishoo slog-sweep, it was put down by Brendan Taylor at midwicket – the first of five opportunities that Zimbabwe let slip through the day. It was left to Raza to make the breakthrough all on his own, drawing a false shot from Bishoo and holding on to a regulation caught-and-bowled chance.

Offering generous flight, Raza struck again soon after when an offbreak kept a little low to peg Kyle Hope, playing back, in front of middle stump. A desperate review couldn’t save him, and West Indies went to the first drinks break at 135 for 3.

When Powell was granted another life on 85 – having already been dropped on 11 on Monday – Zimbabwe’s frustration began to show. But the new ball, taken half an hour before lunch, changed the complexion of the session. Chris Mpofu got the hard new ball to leap alarmingly as Powell fended one to the diving Craig Ervine at gully to fall 10 short of his fourth Test century. The wicket put the pep back in Zimbabwe’s step.

After the interval, the Raza Show kicked into top gear, West Indies stumbling from 219 for 4 to 230 for 7. He started with the breakthrough that stalled Roston Chase and Shai Hope’s fifth wicket stand at 56, BY beating Chase’s reverse sweep with a fizzing offbreak and dismiss him leg before for 32. Jermaine Blackwood played too early at a delivery that bounced with a puff of dust and broke sharply in to him, chipping a catch to Cremer at midwicket. When Raza beat Shai Hope’s defence to rattle his off stump for his fifth wicket, he set off on a celebratory run.

This was the first five-for from a Zimbabwean spinner at Queens Sports Club since Ray Price’s 5 for 199 against West Indies in 2003, but the celebrations was short-lived. The early lbw aside, Holder didn’t give Zimbabwe a sniff and Dowrich was similarly limpet-like.

Bad balls were inevitably carted to the boundary, and Zimbabwe wilted noticeably in the afternoon sun as the pair put on just the third 100-run eighth wicket stand in West Indies Test history. They ended the day with the all-time eighth wicket West Indies record – the 148 put on by Jimmy Adams and Franklyn Rose against Zimbabwe in 2000 – and a healthy lead within their sights.

Liam Brickhill is a freelance journalist based in Cape Town

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

Source: ESPN Crickinfo

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