International cricket tour
The New Zealand cricket team toured India in September and October 2016 to play three Test matches and five One Day Internationals (ODIs).[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] India won the Test series 3–0 and the ODI series 3–2.
In April 2016, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) announced the proposition of one of the Test matches being a day/night game.[ 4] New Zealand Cricket stated that "a number of factors were yet to be finalised before the match could be confirmed".[ 5] In June 2016, the BCCI confirmed the fixtures for India's 2016/17 season, but there was no mention of a day/night Test.[ 6] However, it was reported that a senior official of the Cricket Association of Bengal had confirmed that the Test match in Kolkata would be a day/night game.[ 7] [ 8] At the end of June the dates and times of the matches were announced, with the BCCI stating that all the Tests will start at 9:30am local time.[ 9] In September 2016, the BCCI confirmed that there would be no day/night Tests in India during the 2016–17 season.[ 10]
In September 2016 the BCCI moved the second ODI from 19 October to 20 October because of Karva Chauth .[ 11] [ 12] The first Test in Kanpur was India's 500th Test match[ 13] and the second Test in Kolkata was India's 250th Test match at home.[ 14] The first ODI in Dharamshala was India's 900th ODI match.[ 15]
Following the conclusion of the second Test, there were reports that the Lodha Committee had frozen the BCCI's bank accounts.[ 16] The BCCI then threatened to cancel all the remaining fixtures of the tour.[ 17] The chief executive of New Zealand Cricket , David White, said that their team would continue with the tour and were preparing to travel to Indore for the third Test.[ 18] However, the Lodha Committee clarified what it had said, saying they did not ask for the BCCI's accounts to be frozen, but requested that two specific payments were stopped.[ 19]
Squads
Tim Southee was ruled out of New Zealand's Test squad due to injury and was replaced by Matt Henry .[ 24] Mark Craig suffered an injury in the first Test and was ruled out of the rest of the series. He was replaced by Jeetan Patel .[ 25] After the end of the first Test, KL Rahul was replaced by Gautam Gambhir due to injury and Ishant Sharma was replaced by Jayant Yadav due to illness.[ 26] Shikhar Dhawan was ruled out of the third Test with a fractured finger and replaced by Karun Nair .[ 27] Bhuvneshwar Kumar was ruled out of the third Test with a back injury and was replaced by Shardul Thakur .[ 28] Suresh Raina was not included in the squad for final two ODIs because he was yet to regain full fitness after an illness.[ 29]
Tour match
Three-day: Mumbai vs New Zealanders
Mumbai won the toss and elected to field.
15 players per side (11 batting, 11 fielding).
Test series
1st Test
India won the toss and elected to bat.
Rain stopped play after tea on Day 2 with no further play possible.
This was India's 500th Test match.[ 13]
Ravichandran Ashwin (Ind) became the second-fastest bowler to reach 200 Test wickets.[ 30]
2nd Test
India won the toss and elected to bat.
There was a two-hour rain delay during the afternoon of Day 2.
This was India's 250th Test match at home.[ 31]
Ross Taylor stood as captain for New Zealand, as Kane Williamson had a fever.[ 32]
With this victory, India returned to the top of the ICC Test Championship rankings.[ 33]
Fifteen dismissals in this match were by LBW , the most for a Test in India.[ 34]
3rd Test
India won the toss and elected to bat.
This was the first Test to be hosted at this venue.[ 35]
Ajinkya Rahane became the 36th player for India to reach 2,000 runs in Tests.[ 36]
Virat Kohli became the first player to score two double centuries as captain for India in Tests.[ 37]
Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane made the highest fourth-wicket partnership for India in Tests (365 runs).[ 38]
Ravichandran Ashwin (Ind) recorded his best bowling figures in both an innings and a match.[ 39] [ 40]
This was India's second-biggest win in terms of runs and New Zealand's second-biggest defeat, also in terms of runs, in Tests.[ 41]
ODI series
1st ODI
2nd ODI
India won the toss and elected to field.
This was India's 400th ODI loss.[ 44]
Rohit Sharma (Ind) played in his 150th ODI.[ 44]
Luke Ronchi (NZ) completed 100 dismissals as a wicket-keeper .[ 44]
Kane Williamson became the fifth player to score eight or more centuries for New Zealand in ODIs, the third New Zealand captain to score a century against India and the highest score against India in India.[ 44]
This was the first time in 13 years that New Zealand won an ODI match against India in India, and the first time that New Zealand won at the Feroz Shah Kotla.[ 44]
3rd ODI
India won the toss and elected to field.
James Neesham and Matt Henry 's 84-run partnership is New Zealand's highest 9th-wicket partnership in ODIs.[ 45]
MS Dhoni passed 9,000 runs and hit the most sixes for India in ODIs and also the most sixes by a captain.[ 46]
Virat Kohli (Ind) scored his 26th century in ODIs. His 154 not out is the highest by any player on this ground.
Virat Kohli's century was his 14th in a winning chase making him the joint-highest in such a scenario.[ 47]
Virat Kohli is the quickest to score 3,000 runs at home in terms of innings in ODIs (63).[ 47]
MS Dhoni became the first wicket-keeper to make 150 stumpings in ODIs.[ 47]
4th ODI
New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat.
5th ODI
India won the toss and elected to bat.
Jayant Yadav (Ind) made his ODI debut.
C. K. Nandan (Ind) stood in his first ODI as an umpire.
This was New Zealand's lowest total against India and their shortest completed innings in an ODI.[ 48]
Amit Mishra (Ind) recorded the best bowling figure for a player for India against New Zealand in ODIs.[ 49]
Virat Kohli (Ind) scored the most runs by any player in an India-New Zealand bilateral series played in India (358).[ 49]
References
^ "Cricket Schedule 2016: Fixtures and dates of all major series and matches of the New Year" . International Business Times . Retrieved 3 January 2016 .
^ "Cricket: Please save us from groundhog day" . New Zealand Herald . Retrieved 3 January 2016 .
^ "India Cricket Schedule 2016: Fixtures and dates of all matches for Men in Blue in New Year" . International Business Times . Retrieved 3 January 2016 .
^ " 'India to host day-night Test against New Zealand' " . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 21 April 2016 .
^ "Day-night Test details not finalised yet - NZC" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 22 April 2016 .
^ "BCCI ushers in big home season: 13 Tests, six new venues" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 9 June 2016 .
^ "Eden Gardens to host India's first day-night Test against New Zealand" . India Today . Retrieved 10 June 2016 .
^ "Eden to host India's first day-night Test" . The Hindu . Retrieved 10 June 2016 .
^ "No day-night Test in India-NZ series" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 28 June 2016 .
^ "No home day-night Test this season - Thakur" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 27 September 2016 .
^ "India-New Zealand 2nd ODI shift to 20th Oct" . Crictotal . 9 September 2016. Retrieved 9 September 2016 .
^ "Delhi ODI to be pushed back to October 20" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 8 September 2016 .
^ a b "A landmark Test to start a landmark season" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 21 September 2016 .
^ "Eden Gardens the perfect stage for India's 250th Test at home" . 27 September 2016. Retrieved 29 September 2016 .
^ a b "New Zealand's chance to shrug off Test hangover" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 16 October 2016 .
^ "Indian board's bank accounts frozen and New Zealand tour in doubt - reports" . The Guardian . Retrieved 4 October 2016 .
^ "Miffed BCCI to cancel ongoing India-New Zealand series" . Indian Express . Retrieved 4 October 2016 .
^ "Black Caps tour of India to be cancelled as scandal strikes BCCI" . Stuff . Retrieved 4 October 2016 .
^ "Lodha Committee clarifies BCCI's NZ series-cancellation claim" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 4 October 2016 .
^ "India at full strength for New Zealand Tests" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 12 September 2016 .
^ "Neesham returns to New Zealand Test squad" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 5 September 2016 .
^ "Ashwin, Jadeja, Shami rested for first three NZ ODIs" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 6 October 2016 .
^ "Anderson returns to NZ ODI squad as specialist batsman" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 19 September 2016 .
^ "Southee ruled out of India Tests, Henry called up" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 17 September 2016 .
^ "Craig out of Test series due to side strain, Patel named replacement" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 26 September 2016 .
^ "Gambhir back in Test squad after two years" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 27 September 2016 .
^ "Dhawan injured, Gambhir in line to play Indore Test" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 3 October 2016 .
^ "Shardul Thakur replaces injured Bhuvneshwar" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 5 October 2016 .
^ "India continue to rest key Test bowlers from ODIs" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 24 October 2016 .
^ "Ashwin second-fastest to 200 Test wickets" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 25 September 2016 .
^ "India v NZ, 2nd Test, Kolkata: Rampant India eye series win in 250th home Test - Times of India" . Retrieved 29 September 2016 .
^ "Henry leads NZ fight in Williamson's absence" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 30 September 2016 .
^ "India reclaim top Test ranking with 2-0 lead" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 3 October 2016 .
^ "India's winning spree, and Saha's twin fifties" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 3 October 2016 .
^ "India eye whitewash, New Zealand stronger fight with Williamson" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 8 October 2016 .
^ "Kohli surpasses Ganguly, Dhoni" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 8 October 2016 .
^ "India dominant after Kohli, Rahane add 365" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 9 October 2016 .
^ "India's highest fourth-wicket partnership" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 9 October 2016 .
^ "Ashwin's Test best seals 3-0 whitewash" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 11 October 2016 .
^ "India v New Zealand, 3rd Test, Indore: 153 wickets and counting, R Ashwin a colossus at home" . The Times of India . Retrieved 11 October 2016 .
^ "321: India's second-biggest win by runs" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 11 October 2016 .
^ a b "India end winless spell against New Zealand" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 16 October 2016 .
^ "Pandya's debut three-for sets up India's six-wicket win" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 16 October 2016 .
^ a b c d e "India vs New Zealand - 2nd ODI: Stats" . Sports Keeda . Retrieved 20 October 2016 .
^ "Cricket Records – Records – New Zealand – One-Day Internationals – Highest partnerships by wickets" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 23 October 2016 .
^ "Dhoni's 9000 runs: 244 innings, 10109 balls" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 23 October 2016 .
^ a b c "India v New Zealand Third ODI stats: Kohli's masterclass in Mohali gives India 2-1 lead" . Sports Keeda . Retrieved 23 October 2016 .
^ "Mishra five-for rolls New Zealand over for 79" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 29 October 2016 .
^ a b "Mishra second only to Mishra" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 29 October 2016 .
External links
International cricket tours of India
Test and LOI tours
Afghanistan Australia Bangladesh England Ireland New Zealand Pakistan South Africa Sri Lanka West Indies Zimbabwe
Other tours
Australian Ceylonese/Sri Lankan Dutch English Kenyan Multi-national Tanzanian
September 2016 October 2016 November 2016 December 2016 January 2017 February 2017 March 2017 Ongoing