Sunday, November 7, 2010

indai newzealand cricket news,India take slim first-innings lead, first innings lead on newzeland

Kane Williamson's debut Test century was the highlight of a steady morning session but New Zealand lost their final five wickets for 42 runs to inject some interest in a match that looked set to meander to a draw. He was supported by his captain Daniel Vettori, who made a characteristically gritty innings, and the pair added 86 before Williamson fell on the final over before lunch with New Zealand well past 400.
India's chances in the session before that late breakthrough came in the first four overs: Vettori was saved from becoming a lbw victim to Zaheer Khan by an inside-edge in the second over of the day; Williamson nicked just short of third slip in the next from Sreesanth; and Vettori survived another lbw appeal two overs later, when Sreesanth struck him high on the pad. 

For the next 100 minutes, it was all New Zealand. Williamson hit a couple of boundaries off Zaheer - a pull behind square and a glance to fine leg three balls later - to move from 93 to 101 and become the eighth New Zealander to make a hundred in his first Test. There were no extravagant theatrics that you might expect from a 20-year-old who had played a fine innings to rescue his team from a tight spot, just a big grin and a wave of the bat towards the dressing room.
Vettori settled down after his initial jitters, mostly nudging the ball around for singles, though there was a punch down the ground for four off Zaheer and a waltz out of the crease to deposit Pragyan Ojha over long-off. He was unbeaten on 41 at lunch, having passed 4000 Test runs, again showcasing how much his batting has developed in the past few years.
India's bowlers were flat on a pitch which was still good for batting. It didn't help that Zaheer, who has been MS Dhoni's go-to bowler, didn't appear to be 100% fit, rarely hitting even 130kmh. The spinners tried but any turn they extracted was so slow that the batsman had plenty of time to adjust.
A draw is still the odds-on favourite, but India wheedled out the last four New Zealand wickets in the hour and a half after lunch to keep alive their slim chances of forcing a result. Vettori fell attempting to cut a ball too close to off, Gareth Hopkins misread an arm ball from Pragyan Ojha before the quicks took a wicket each to close out the innings.

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