Series Name: | Indian cricket team in New Zealand in 1980–81 |
Team1 Image: | Flag of New Zealand.svg |
Team1 Name: | New Zealand |
Team2 Image: | Flag of India.svg |
Team2 Name: | India |
From Date: | 14 February |
To Date: | 18 March 1981 |
Team1 Captain: | Geoff Howarth |
Team2 Captain: | Sunil Gavaskar |
No Of Tests: | 3 |
Team1 Tests Won: | 1 |
Team2 Tests Won: | 0 |
Team1 Tests Most Runs: | John Reid (250) |
Team2 Tests Most Runs: | Sandeep Patil (186) |
Team1 Tests Most Wickets: | Lance Cairns (13) |
Team2 Tests Most Wickets: | Ravi Shastri (15) |
Player Of Test Series: | John Reid (NZ) |
No Of Odis: | 2 |
Team1 Odis Won: | 2 |
Team2 Odis Won: | 0 |
Team1 Odis Most Runs: | Bruce Edgar (100) |
Team2 Odis Most Runs: | Kapil Dev (51) |
Team1 Odis Most Wickets: | Gary Troup (4) |
Team2 Odis Most Wickets: | Karsan Ghavri (5) |
The India cricket team toured New Zealand in the 1980–81 season to play a three-match Test series and a two-match One Day International (ODI) series against New Zealand. The tour also included two tour matches against New Zealand's first-class sides. After the tour ended, India played Fiji in a two-day game in Lautoka, defeating them by 220 runs.[1] New Zealand won the ODI series 2–0 and the Test series that followed 1–0. It was their first series win against India in Tests in seven attempts.[2]
India arrived in New Zealand on the back of a series-levelling win in the final Test against Australia. However, failing to capitalize on the momentum, India lost both ODIs played on consecutive days, before drawing a game against a first-class side. India missed the services of Shivlal Yadav for the entire Test series that followed, and of Dilip Doshi for the first Test after they sustained injuries on the Australia tour. New Zealand defeated India by 62 runs in the first Test, their first win against India in seven Tests, while India managed to secure draws in the next two. Wisden reasoned India's "inept batting" for their loss of the series.[3]
This series was the first where players wore coloured clothing played with white balls and black sighscreens used outside Australia