New Zealand’s Kane Williamson and Brendon McCullum made centuries in a
221-run partnership which put the hosts in control at 329-4 after
Thursday’s opening day of the first test against India, in Auckland.
Williamson (113) and McCullum (143 not out) came together with New Zealand in trouble at 30-3.
Indian bowlers went wicketless in the post lunch session as Williamson
and McCullum raised an unbeaten stand for the fourth wicket to stabilise
the New Zealand’s sinking ship after they had been reduced to 30 for
three halfway through the morning session at Eden Park.
Ishant Sharma (2-39) was the most successful bowler, with Zaheer Khan
(1-67) chipping in as well. Mohammad Shami (0-44) was unlucky not to
have taken a wicket in either session, even as Ravindra Jadeja (0—20)
did not look like taking one in his short spell. Virat Kohli (0-4)
bowled one over as well.
Williamson (22 not out) and McCullum (5 not out) started off after
lunch, looking to repair the damage from the morning session and rebuild
the innings. Their approach was a mix of caution and punishing the bad
deliveries of which there were plenty as the conditions eased out.
Wind carried away the cloud cover from the morning and finally the sun
came out as prominent swing from the morning session vanished.
Even so, Shami managed to induce an edge from Williamson in the 29th
over of the innings, five overs after the restart, only for Murali Vijay
to put it down at first slip.
The batsman was on 32 at that time and did not present another chance
throughout the remainder of the session, instead scoring some beautiful
shots all over the Eden Park.
The 50-run partnership between the two came in the 30th over and from there in, they pressed on with the scoring.
Williamson hit two sixes, the first in the 33rd over, when New Zealand
were placed at 102/3, and the second in the 38th over, reaching his 13th
Test fifty.
At the other end, McCullum brought up his 29th Test fifty in 86 balls in
the 43rd over, as also their 100-run partnership. In doing so, he
carried the team-score past the 150-mark as well.
Earlier, Indian skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni won his sixth straight toss
on this tour, and opted to bowl first in optimum conditions. The
visitors did not make any changes to their eleven that played against
South Africa in Durban.
Similarly, the hosts did not make any either to their eleven that played West Indies in Hamilton.
Peter Fulton (13) and Hamish Rutherford (6) took first strike, even as
Shami and Khan bowled at lively pace and beat the batsmen on more than a
couple of occasions.
In fact, Fulton was very lucky to survive as long as he did,
continuously troubled by all Indian bowlers. He should have gone back,
first on the seventh ball of the innings, with Khan inducing an edge but
Shikhar Dhawan dove in front of second slip and spilled the chance.
Fulton was on one at that time, and 11 runs later, he got another life
when umpire Richard Kettleborough did not raise his finger on a plumb
LBW decision by Shami. He eventually got out for 13, when Khan finally
trapped him in the 13th over.
At the other end, Rutherford was brilliantly set up by Sharma in the
10th over earlier, with the batsman fishing outside the off stump on
more than one occasion. After four balls, the bowler finally found an
edge as Ajinkya Rahane completed a superb diving catch at gully.
That was not the end of New Zealand’s woes, with Ross Taylor (3) looking
to play his shots from the very beginning, despite a difficult pitch.
It did not pay off, as he drove Sharma on-the-up and Jadeja completed a
stunning catch at short mid-off, leaving the Kiwis reeling at 30/3.
Williamson and McCullum then saw off the 25 minutes before lunch without
any further loss, with the 50-run mark of the innings coming in the
penultimate over of the session bowled by Jadeja.
Source: Cricket News in Hindi
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