MOUNT MAUNGUNAI, New Zealand — The second Twenty20 between New Zealand and the West Indies ended as a no-result washout at Mount Maunganui Monday.
After a 20-minute rain delay at the start, only nine overs were possible before the rain returned and the umpires took the players from the field with New Zealand 102 for four.
Colin Munro blasted a whirlwind 66 off 23 deliveries after the West Indies won the toss and put New Zealand into bat.
Munro equaled his own New Zealand record when he reached his half-century off 18 deliveries.
His rollicking knock included 11 fours, three sixes, and just two singles and a two.
New Zealand remains 1-0 up in the series with the third and final match at Mount Maunganui Wednesday.
Steyn waiting for chance
Dale Steyn has been close to the milestone for more than a year now but, at the age of 34, time is running out for the speed merchant to become South Africa’s most prolific wicket taker.
Steyn’s 417 Test-wicket haul is just four shy of the South African record held by Shaun Pollock but the target remains both tantalizingly close and frustratingly elusive at the same time.
Standing between him and the tag of the country’s best ever bowler have been a serious shoulder injury and a lengthy spell on the sidelines.
After his latest piece of rotten luck, some doubt that Steyn will get his long-awaited opportunity when South Africa takes on India in a three-Test series starting at Newlands Friday.
It has been 14 months since Steyn’s last Test and the rustiness of the lay-off, plus the absence of a decent examination of his shoulder in match conditions, could see him left out, local media suggested.
“There is significant, ill-advised risk associated with any fast-track return,” wrote local cricket columnist Rob Houwing this week (www.sport24.co.za) after the pace bowler missed out on the Boxing Day test against Zimbabwe.
Steyn’s shoulder travails began against England in Durban in December 2015 but it was just under a year later in Perth in November 2016 that extensive damage was done as he broke the right shoulder and tore three major muscles on the second day of the first test against Australia.
He went home to Cape Town for surgery, followed by lengthy rehabilitation and abortive comebacks before he was gently eased back into Twenty20 action in November and then 12 wicketless overs in whites just before Christmas.
Steyn was due to return in the one-off test against Zimbabwe in Port Elizabeth last week but on the opening morning of the day-night match was unluckily ruled out by a bout of influenza. — Agencies