Carey the clutch king: Gloveman's stunning 98, Cummins heroics keep Kiwi curse alive in thrilling comeback win

By Tim Miller / Editor

With his place as Australian wicketkeeper suddenly in jeopardy after a poor run of scores with the bat, Alex Carey’s brilliant unbeaten 98 to steer his team to a thrilling three-wicket victory over New Zealand did more than just win the match for his country – it might prove a career-saver.

Needing 202 runs for victory heading into Day 4 in Christchurch with six wickets remaining, the gloveman proved a man for the crisis as he turned matchwinner at Hagley Oval, combining first with Mitchell Marsh (80) for a sprightly 140-run partnership at nearly five an over; then steadying the ship with captain Pat Cummins (32 not out) for a nerveless 61-run unbroken stand to secure a famous comeback win.

While a century would have been appropriate for such a rearguard effort, quite possibly the finest innings by an Australian wicketkeeper since Adam Gilchrist’s legendary death-defying century against Pakistan in Hobart in 1999, Carey’s joy as he embraced Cummins after the latter struck the winning boundary through point showed he could scarcely have cared less about the milestone.

“I was happy with that!” Carey joked after the match about Cummins’ winning shot stranding him just short of three figures.

“I didn’t want to get on strike again!”

Player of the match honours were a fitting reward for the South Australian, whose run of low scores to start the series, combined with rival keeper Josh Inglis’ recent Sheffield Shield century, had led to significant pressure over his spot in the XI, but who couldn’t possibly have silenced his doubters more emphatically.

“This game ebbed and flowed, back against the wall this morning… it was nice to chase those runs down,” Carey said.

“The ball was nipping around, and I thought Mitch Marsh’s intent was outstanding, and got us going a little bit.

“That was the messaging this morning: let’s go out there and play our way, if you see an opportunity, take it. And I thought Mitch’s innings today was brilliant.”

The result is the second nerve-wracking Australian run chase in the past 12 months, following their remarkable two-wicket triumph against England in last year’s first Ashes Test; that both had Cummins playing a leading role and hitting the winning runs likewise speaks volumes about the captain’s calm head in times of crisis.

The result, and subsequent 2-0 series win, continues New Zealand’s misery on home soil against Australia, with their last Test victory at home over their bogey side coming some 31 years ago.

“We’ve got quite an experienced side, we’ve played a lot of Test matches and had quite a bit of success along the way – I think the story of this series was in key moments, one guy stood up,” Cummins said after the match of Australia’s twin victories.

“We didn’t necessarily play complete games, but in those pivotal moments, someone stood up and made themselves a matchwinner.

“We keep finding ways to win. It’s a pretty awesome squad.”

Having taken the match by the throat with a superb third day, questions must be asked how the Black Caps let the match slip; from fatally defensive fields set by captain Tim Southee to allow Marsh and Carey to tick the scoreboard over without risk early, to a dropped catch at point by Rachin Ravindra to spare the former just minutes into the day.

While Travis Head would fall the ball after for 18, it was Marsh who would prove, alongside Carey, the day’s most crucial contributor.

Debutant Ben Sears can hold his head high after finishing the innings with four wickets, including a double-strike midway through the day when he removed Marsh (LBW) and Mitchell Starc (caught at mid-wicket) in successive balls to leave Australia seven down with 59 still required.

But a narrow escape for Carey as he ramped a Sears short ball just over a leaping Glenn Phillips at gully would prove the last sniff the Black Caps would get, the wicketkeeper using his oft-maligned sweep to good effect to keep Phillips at bay and Cummins batting with authority unbefitting of a number nine, a glorious on drive to bring the runs required into single figures the standout shot.

“It ended up being a great Test match – obviously the partnership with Mitch Marsh and Alex Carey was a great partnership that sort of broke the back of our attack,” Southee, whose 100th Test having shared the milestone with fellow great Kane Williamson ended in bitter disappointment, said.

“When you’re playing the number one side in the world, you just need to go that little bit further.

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“No one means to drop catches, it’s part of the game, but when you’re playing against the best side in the world, you’ve just got to be a bit better for a bit longer.”

Australia won’t play another Test until India arrive for a blockbuster five-Test series next summer, with attention turning to the upcoming T20 World Cup in the Caribbean and USA.

The Crowd Says:

2024-03-13T07:27:43+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


My son in law is from NZ lives here and I can’t get the All Black out of him!! However he realises that here the pool of talent is spread over NRL. AFL Soccer and Union, unlike NZ.

2024-03-13T07:27:09+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Like kids who've never seen the ocean

2024-03-13T07:16:52+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


Twenty years of thumpings by the ABs. Think of anyone born when John Eales lifted the Bledisloe Cup is at least 20 and never seen it raised!!

2024-03-13T07:16:29+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I spose most Kiwis hope for us to be better at Union like I want NZ to be better at cricket.

2024-03-13T07:14:49+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


You should've seen the serve l just gave the guy at security picking my son up from the Airport. The incompetency was bloody astounding

2024-03-13T06:39:03+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


Sorry it was probably a rigjht paine in the ...

2024-03-13T06:34:16+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


I lived it at each test went to four of the five live .

2024-03-13T05:25:43+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Agreed. Following his performance through 2024 will be a real highlight of the Test calendar. No doubt opposition teams will eventually work out their plans to him, but he is likely to have a fairly free run at it for a while.

2024-03-13T02:27:59+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Goodo

2024-03-13T01:55:47+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


It will be interesting to see whether Joseph can repeat some of his feats in England in a few months. It would be great to see him cut a swathe through the Poms batting lineup.

2024-03-13T01:47:31+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


The Wallabies are the hardest team to watch in so many ways.

2024-03-13T01:46:42+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


Don’t watch ‘The Test’ series 1.

2024-03-13T01:44:46+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


Cummins the fielder Rowdy?

2024-03-13T01:43:30+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


A reflection on the NZ series. I thought the gaping hole in the NZ attack was not so much Jameson but the brilliant swing and seam bowling of the recently retiredTrent Boult. He always makes life difficult for the top order.

2024-03-13T01:29:18+00:00

Gamechanger

Roar Rookie


Slowing down, slower reflexes. The characteristic movement across the crease and taking the ball from middle and off through mid wicket was one of his signature Shots. However with slower reflexes he is missing that ball and getting caught plumb. Facing a new ball bowler who can really swing the ball exacerbates the problem.

2024-03-12T22:00:49+00:00

Short Arm

Roar Rookie


I found that hard to believe, why didn't he just admit that he wanted to get the win as fast as possible?

2024-03-12T16:56:37+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Well, that was a, ahem, paine to read

2024-03-12T16:27:00+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


Well look for team spirit he did a job for time smith and Warner were out I guess but dire decision maker and field setter . Even he got reckless swinging to be caught as planned by England when australia was 6 down for little with no composure in the first test in 19. A series that should have been won outright thats for sure. As I always said he was a great keeper who was missed behind stumps at periods due to horrific injuries but was slowing down in the last year on that front too

2024-03-12T09:29:38+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I'm trying to forget Paine was our captain once.

2024-03-12T09:20:58+00:00

Pierro

Roar Rookie


Hmm id disagree a little Jeff but also agree to some extent.. I dont think players like head or labs have been vilified off 24 hours . Try 12 test matches and a decline over 12 months let alone the two years before mate which is clearly evidenced in averages., where there averages have been 24 and 30 respectively this year (2024) and then really po0r in summer 28 and 25 over 5 tests matches . Thats 7 tests of dire shambles give or take an innings to bolster up the numbers on a home deck and a gutsy knock by labs in nz. I think one can give credit to a Joseph for example but also realize that cummins made 60 runs against him and carey made 64 against him let alone smith making 91* and bison and green made some good runs but labs and head flunked both innings for a combined total of 8 runs. I dont think its vilifying them for 24 hours more like 7 tests . I do notice you are right however about the villification of say smith and khawaja who have just had a lower start to 2024 but also had some tough conditions to open in in NZ for me as NZ openers failed too across both tests and Latham had great batting conditions second innings. To be fair there are some on here are going tonto over 24 hours without considering even recent efforts or a good performance or the other side. I thought NZ were amazing in the second innings second test batting and Henry was incredible and tired and the debutant shows huge talent. Ravindra can really bat too and have nothing but credit for Williamson. NZ were a bit unlucky and one could argue it came down to fielding and Australia also got very lucky second test although Head was totally reckless yet again!

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