When Mark Richardson and Matthew Bell put on 69 for New Zealand's first wicket on the last day of the second Test at Christchurch it was their third successive opening stand of fifty or more. The pair put on 91 in the second innings of the first Test and 102 in the first innings of the second.
The question was raised - "when was the last time New Zealand did this?" The quite staggering answer is that three successive opening stands of fity or more had never happened before (with either the same or different opening combinations) in New Zealand's entire Test history.
In the second Test Stephen Fleming passed John Reid's long-standing record of most Tests as captain. The players who have captained New Zealand most often in Tests are now:
Seasons Tests
Stephen Fleming 1996/97-2000/01 35
John Reid 1955/56-1965 34
Geoff Howarth 1979/80-1984/85 30
Graham Dowling 1967/68-1971/72 19
Ken Rutherford 1992/93-1994/95 18
Bevan Congdon 1971/72-1974/75 17
Martin Crowe 1990/91-1993/94 16
Jeremy Coney 1984/85-1986/87 15
When Adam Parore caught Waqar Younis on the last morning of the second Test it was his 169th catch in Test cricket, a New Zealand record. It also gave him 176 dismissals in total, equalling Ian Smith's record.
However, as three of Parore's catches were taken in the field, he is still two short of Smith's New Zealand wicket-keeping record for catches and three short of the dismissals tally. Ironically, though, two catches taken by Parore as a substitute when he deputised for Smith in Pakistan in 1990/91, cannot be included in his record.
The leading New Zealand wicket-keepers are:
Matches Ct St Total
Ian Smith 63 168 8 176
Adam Parore 69 166 7 173*
Ken Wadsworth 33 92 4 96
Warren Lees 21 52 7 59
Artie Dick 17 47 4 51
* plus three catches as a fielder
Mathew Sinclair joined a very short list when he reached 150 during the course of his double century in the second Test. He became just the fifth player in Test history whose first three centuries were all 150 or more. Those players are:
Mahela Jayawardene 167, 242, 167
Andrew Jones 150, 170*, 186
Brian Lara 277, 167, 375
Javed Miandad 163, 206, 154*
Mathew Sinclair 214, 150, 204*
Australia's Bobby Simpson is not on the list but deserves a mention. He had a sequence from his first Test hundred of 311, 153, 115, 201, 225 and 153.
Sinclair has now scored ten first-class hundreds, seven of which have been 150 or more. They are:
189 Central Districts v Wellington Masterton 1996/97
166* Central Districts v Auckland Masterton 1998/99
203* Central Districts v Northern Districts Wanganui 1998/99
182 North Island v England 'A' Lincoln 1999/00
214 New Zealand v West Indies Wellington 1999/00
102 Central Districts v Otago Palmerston North 1999/00
100* New Zealand v President's XI Mutare 2000/01
150 New Zealand v South Africa Port Elizabeth 2000/01
145 Central Districts v Auckland Auckland 2000/01
204* New Zealand v Pakistan Christchurch 2000/01
Sinclair's double century was just the ninth in New Zealand Test history and Sinclair became just the second New Zealand batsman after Glenn Turner to score two. He also became the first New Zealand batsman to add a fity to a double hundred in the same game.
The most runs in one game for New Zealand are now:
Martin Crowe 329 (30 & 299) v Sri Lanka Wellington 1990/91
Bryan Young 267 (267) v Sri Lanka Dunedin 1996/97
Glenn Turner 259 (259) v West Indies Georgetown 1971/72
Mathew Sinclair 254 (204* & 50*) v Pakistan Christchurch 2000/01
Stephen Fleming 252 (78 & 174*) v Sri Lanka Colombo 1997/98
Bevan Congdon 248 (166* & 82) v West Indies Port of Spain 1971/72
Graham Dowling 244 (239 & 5) v India Christchurch 1967/68
Glenn Turner 244 (223* & 21) v West Indies Kingston 1971/72
Bert Sutcliffe 230 (230*) v India Delhi 1955/56
Geoff Howarth 224 (122 & 102) v England Auckland 1977/78
Sinclair and Yousuf Youhana (203) both scored double hundreds in the second Test - not an unusual feat (it had happened 18 times previously) - but only the second time it had happened in New Zealand. Aravinda de Silva (267) and Martin Crowe (299) achieved the feat at the Basin Reserve in 1990/91 while the only other instance involving New Zealand came at Kingston in 1971/72 when Lawrence Rowe scored 214 and Glenn Turner 223 not out.
West Indies and Australia achieved a unique feat at Bridgetown in 1964/65 when they amassed three double hundreds in the one match. Billy Lawry, Bobby Simpson and Seymour Nurse all reached two hundred.
Pakistan kept New Zealand in the field for 210 overs in the second Test but this was by no means a record. The full list of 200 over innings which New Zealand has fielded through are:
241.5 v India (531-7d) Delhi 1955/56
227.3 v England (439) Auckland 1983/84
221.3 v England (550) Christchurch 1950/51
214 v West Indies (564-8) Bridgetown 1971/72
210 v Pakistan (571-8d) Christchurch 2000/01
209 v India (438-7d) Calcutta 1955/56
156.3 v England (429) Auckland 1977/78*
203 v Pakistan (616-5d) Auckland 1988/89
200.1 v South Africa (621-5d) Auckland 1998/99
* eight-ball overs (equivalent to 208.3 six-ball overs)
Yousuf Youhana and Saqlain Mushtaq put on a mammoth 248 for Pakistan's seventh wicket at Christchurch but this, too, was well short of being a record for that wicket against New Zealand. The highest are:
308 Waqar Hassan & Imtiaz Ahmed Pakistan Lahore 1955/56
248 Yousuf Youhana & Saqlain Mushtaq Pakistan Christchurch 2000/01
246 Jackie McGlew & Anton Murray South Africa Wellington 1952/53
217 Doug Walters & Gary Gilmour Australia Christchurch 1976/77
168 Rod Marsh & Kerry O'Keefe Australia Adelaide 1973/74
149 Alan Knott & Peter Lever England Auckland 1970/71
143 Dennis Atkinson & John Goddard West Indies Christchurch 1955/56
142* Steve Waugh & Shane Warne Australia Brisbane 1993/94
137 Romesh Kaluwitharana & Chaminda Vaas Sri Lanka Dunedin 1996/97
Chris Drum had a bizarre introduction to Test cricket which went from joy to despair. His first ball was a no-ball to Ijaz Ahmed but his next delivery had the Pakistan batsman dislodging a bail and being out hit wicket. Drum was following the path of the ball from the bat and failed to see his moment of glory only realising what had happened when his team mates alerted him to it.
Later in the game Drum fell on his shoulder while fielding and injured himself so badly that he had to spend the rest of the game with his arm in a sling.
Drum does not, of course, join the list of players who have taken a wicket with their first ball in Test cricket. The only two New Zealanders to have done so remain Matt Henderson against England in New Zealand's first ever Test (Christchurch, 1929/30) and Dennis Smith - again at Christchurch and again against England - in 1932/33.