Deccan Chronicle

Kiwis pin India to mat

Jamieson takes five as New Zealand bowl India out for 242 to seize momentum

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Christchur­ch, Feb. 29: Indian batsmen showed intent but their reckless shot selection took them only as far as 242 on an eventful opening day of the second Test against New Zealand, here on Saturday.

Prithvi Shaw (54) and Cheteshwar Pujara (54) hit contrastin­g half-centuries to take the fight to the rival camp. However, Hanuma Vihari’s (55 off 70 balls) dismissal at the stroke of tea tilted the scale in New Zealand’s favour as they gained a clear upper-hand by stumps.

Kyle Jamieson (5/45) in an inspired post-tea spell blew away the middle and lower-order to finish with his maiden five-wicket haul in only his second Test.

The hosts ended the day at 63 for no loss with both the Toms — Latham (27 batting) and Blundell (29 batting) hardly troubled by Indian pacers. The pitch will be best for batting

on days two and three which means that for Virat Kohli and his men, the catchup game starts from the second day itself as ignominy of a 0-2 series loss looms large.

On a green-top, three Indian batsmen showed that scoring runs wasn’t difficult. Shah’s lunging drive after his second half-century in Tests and Vihari and Pujara’s illtimed pull shots were a testimony that their dismissals were more about profligacy than New Zealand’s bowling.

Rishabh Pant, who has been preferred over a much-accomplish­ed Wriddhiman Saha, purely on batting skills, played a lazy shot to find his stumps rattled. From 194 for four with a standard first innings total of

350 looking imminent,

India lost five wickets for 22 runs in a period of six overs and it could well have a decisive impact in the final outcome of the contest. Jamieson, in his post-tea spell, got rid of Pujara, Pant and Umesh Yadav in quick succession as India lost a golden opportunit­y to press home the advantage.

The 32 boundaries and three sixes with a run-rate of 3.84 in 63 overs will not able to tell the story how Indians fluffed their lines during the day. The immensely talented Shaw displayed improved footwork that saw him drive elegantly as the likes of Trent Boult (2/89) and Colin de Grandhomme (0/31) were guilty of over-pitching in trying to get some swing. There were square drives and a few on-drives while he also played and missed a few. He did live dangerousl­y but more importantl­y had the scoreboard ticking even when Pujara was stuck at the other end. Neil Wagner bowled a bouncer and Shaw hooked him for maximum to reach his half-century. Having added 50 runs with Pujara, the senior partner should have ideally calmed the inexperien­ced one.

 ?? — AP ?? Hanuma Vihari en route to his half-century.
— AP Hanuma Vihari en route to his half-century.

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