-
South Africa, India eye T20 World Cup rematch as semi-finals begin
-
Trump hosts Germany's Merz for talks eclipsed by Mideast war
-
Second-hand phones surf rising green consumer wave
-
Pakistanis at remote border describe scramble to leave Iran
-
China votes to oust three generals from political advisory body
-
Murray scores 45 as Nuggets hold off Jazz
-
Five things about the 2026 F1 season
-
Scrum-half Gibson-Park: Ireland's 'petit general'
-
Geopolitical storm leaves isolated Greenlanders hanging by a telecoms thread
-
Myong hat-trick as North Korea cruise at Women's Asian Cup
-
AI disinformation turns Nepal polls into 'digital battleground'
-
New Israel, Iran attacks across region: Latest developments in Middle East war
-
China's overstretched healthcare looks to AI boom
-
Oil extends gains and stocks drop as Iran conflict spreads
-
Rituals of resilience: how Afghan women stay sane in their 'cage'
-
Strait of Hormuz impasse squeezes world shipping
-
Fresh Israel, Iran attacks across region: Latest developments in Middle East war
-
Oscar-nominated Iranian doc offers different vision of leadership
-
Oscar-nominated docs take on hot-button US social issues
-
'I couldn't breathe': The dark side of Bolivia's silver boom
-
Trump warns of longer Iran war as Riyadh, Beirut hit
-
Underground party scene: Israelis celebrate Purim in air raid shelters
-
Flowers, music, and soldiers at funeral of drug lord
-
'Safety and wellbeing' will guide F1 Mideast planning: FIA chief
-
Trump to attend White House Correspondents' dinner
-
Will Iran's missiles drain US interceptor stocks?
-
Trump warns of longer Iran war as violence spreads
-
Energy infrastructure emerges as war target, lifting prices
-
Trump warns of longer Iran war, Rubio points at Israel
-
US urges to 'depart now' from Middle East: Latest developments in Iran war
-
Ecuador launches joint anti-drug operations with US
-
Getafe deal flat Real Madrid La Liga title race blow
-
Rubio, Hezbollah and Qatar: Latest developments in Iran war
-
Rubio says Israel's strike plan triggered US attack on Iran
-
'Thank you, madam president': Melania Trump leads UN Security Council as Iran war rages
-
Bombing Iran, Trump has 'epic fury' but endgame undefined
-
US slaps sanctions on Rwanda military over DR Congo 'violation'
-
US Congress to debate Trump's war powers
-
US appeals court denies Trump bid to delay tariff refund lawsuits
-
Trump warns of longer Iran war
-
Fire-damaged Six nations trophy to be replaced
-
Trump mulls ground troops: latest developments in US-Iran war
-
Middle East war puts shipping firms in tight insurance spot
-
Qatar downs Iran jets as Tehran targets oil and gas in spiralling Gulf crisis
-
UK PM says US will not use British bases in Cyprus
-
Can Anthropic survive taking on Trump's Pentagon?
-
Real Madrid superstar Mbappe in Paris for treatment on knee injury
-
Mideast war risks sending global economy into stagflation
-
Stranded tourists shelter from missile fire in Dubai
-
Iran war spells danger for global airlines
New Zealand strike as West Indies lose brave Hope to be 120-5
New Zealand took three wickets in four overs, including the heroic Shai Hope, as the West Indies were 120-5 at tea, still 111 in arrears on day two of the first Test in Christchurch on Wednesday.
The not out batsmen were Tagenarine Chanderpaul on 45 and Tevin Imlach on three.
Hope, wearing sunglasses under heavily overcast skies because of an eye infection, looked to have turned the West Indies fortunes around after going to the crease at 10-2.
Despite being affected by conjunctivitis he was the lead run-maker in a 90-run partnership with Chanderpaul for the third wicket.
But after a near chanceless sixth Test half-century, he allowed a Jacob Duffy delivery to brush his gloves on its way to wicketkeeper Tom Latham and was gone for 56.
Matt Henry followed with a double-wicket maiden, having both Roston Chase and Justin Greaves caught behind by Latham without scoring, as the West Indies slumped from 100-2 to 106-5.
The West Indies took just three balls to end the New Zealand first innings at the start of the day, without adding to their overnight 231-9.
Zak Foulkes, the last man out, was then immediately in the action with the ball.
The 23-year-old swing specialist, playing just his second Test, removed John Campbell for one with his first delivery.
Will Young completed the dismissal with a smart one-handed catch to his left at third slip, but then dropped a regulation chance when Alick Athanaze on four, edged Matt Henry.
However, the scoreboard had not moved before Henry bowled Athanaze in his following over with a ball that nipped back sharply to have the West Indies 10-2.
W.Lapointe--BTB