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Zimbabwean cricket team in the West Indies in 2006

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Zimbabwe in West Indies 2006
 
  Zimbabwe West Indies
Dates 29 April – 14 May 2006
Captains Terry Duffin Brian Lara
One Day International series
Results West Indies won the 7-match series 5–0
Most runs Justice Chibhabha (162) Ramnaresh Sarwan (254)
Most wickets Prosper Utseya (6) Jerome Taylor (9)
Player of the series Shivnarine Chanderpaul

The 2006 international cricket season started with controversial ICC members Zimbabwe touring the West Indies for a series of seven One Day International matches. Because Zimbabwe recently pulled out of playing Test matches, the tour had to be rescheduled which meant the two Test matches were turned into limited overs games, bumping them up from the original five. After Zimbabwe's decision to leave Test cricket at the start of 2006, the West Indian Cricket Board had reconsidered the tour, but without any other team to play they had to appease both sponsors and fans. Although the teams lie next to each other in the ICC ODI Championship, West Indies holds 89 points in eighth place, 47 more than the tourists' 42 in ninth.

Schedule

Date Match Venue
April
29 1st ODI Antigua
30 2nd ODI Antigua
May
3 Tour match Antigua
6 3rd ODI Guyana
7 4th ODI Guyana
10 5th ODI St. Lucia
13 6th ODI Trinidad
14 7th ODI Trinidad

Squads

Zimbabwe[1] West Indies

One-Day Matches

First ODI (29 April)

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Brian Lara's first match in his third spell as captain ended in victory, as Zimbabwe mustered 151 in their 50 overs, and four West Indian bowlers got two wickets each. Despite Runako Morton recording a duck, West Indies made it to the target with five wickets and 11.4 overs to spare, as Lara top scored with 40, the second highest total of the match. However, according to Cricinfo reporter Will Luke, West Indies "rarely looked in complete control".[2] For Zimbabwe, Blessing Mahwire bowled seven overs and conceded 14 runs with six wides, while Prosper Utseya picked up a career best three for 35. In the first innings, Justice Chibhabha hit a half-century in his second ODI.

Second ODI (30 April)

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Despite another half-century from Justice Chibhabha, this time worth 12 runs more than in the first ODI, Zimbabwe's total of 144 was seven lower than in the first ODI. West Indies had batted first, making 242 for 9 after Chris Gayle, Ramnaresh Sarwan and Shivnarine Chanderpaul all passed 40, while five Zimbabwean bowlers got at least one wicket each. Jerome Taylor then took four wickets as Zimbabwe fell for 144, with Elton Chigumbura (13) and Tawanda Mupariwa (16) joining Chibhabha with double figure scores.

Tour Match: Zimbabwe v University of West Indies Vice Chancellor's XI (3 May)

University of West Indies Vice Chancellor's XI won by 5 wickets[3]

Piet Rinke hit 113 for the Zimbabweans in the 13-a-side match, and Brendan Taylor and Charles Coventry also took half-centuries. For the University of West Indies' XI, Ryan Hinds and Xavier Marshall, who had both played internationals for West Indies before, made scores of 117 not out and 54 respectively, and C. Walton anchored the chase with 67 as the hosts won with 23 balls to spare.

Third ODI (6 May)

Match abandoned without a ball being bowled.

Fourth ODI (7 May)

West Indies 333/6 (50 overs) West Indies won by 82 runs[4]

S Chanderpaul 93 (82)
HP Rinke 1/30 [4]

Bourda, Georgetown, Guyana
Umpires: BF Bowden (NZL) and SA Bucknor (WIN)
Man of the Match: S Chanderpaul (WIN)

Zimbabwe 251/7 (50 overs)

E Chigumbura 60 (59)
FH Edwards 3/42 [10]

West Indies sealed at least a draw in the series after a convincing 82-run victory over Zimbabwe in Georgetown. The West Indies handed a debut to 25-year-old opener Sewnarine Chattergoon but he disappointed in front of his home crowd scoring only 9. But a few players did play a part in the massive total of 333/6 set by the West Indies. Shivnarine Chanderpaul top scored with 93 off 82 balls (7 fours & 4 sixes), and there were also half-centuries from Runako Morton (79 off 90) and captain Brian Lara (56 off 45). This set Zimbabwe an unlikely 334 target, and sure enough struggled. Fidel Edwards bowled Piet Rinke with the first ball of the innings, and also took the scalp of Zimbabwean captain Terry Duffin with the 4th ball of that over, leaving Zimbabwe at one run for two wickets, but steady knocks from Justice Chibhabha, Vusi Sibanda and Elton Chigumbura got the Zimbabweans past 100. But they weren't scoring quickly enough, and after their allotted 50 overs, came up 82 runs short, with Edwards the pick of the bowlers. This was also the last international match at the Bourda ground:[5]

Fifth ODI (10 May)

It was first ever day-night game in west-indies.

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Sixth ODI (13 May)

West Indies 263/6 (50 overs) No Result[6]

RS Morton 109 (150)
RS Higgins 2/39 [10]

Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Umpires: BF Bowden (NZL) and SA Bucknor (WIN)
Man of the Match: Not awarded

Zimbabwe 72/2 (12.1 overs)

BRM Taylor 20* (21)
MN Samuels 1/31 [5]

Seventh ODI (14 May)

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Notes

External sources

Further reading