Sunday Star-Times

Pacemen give NZ the edge

- IAN ANDERSON

His batting may infuriate New Zealand’s fans, but Tim Southee’s newball bowling is still capable of generating much love.

The Black Caps swing bowler produced an admirable spell that – coupled with a burst of wickets from Neil Wagner – enabled the hosts to end day two of the second cricket test against Pakistan at Hamilton’s Seddon Park in a position of dominance.

At stumps, Pakistan were 76-5 – trailing NZ’s first innings by 195 with a shaky tail to come.

Southee’s right-arm swing and variation did in the Pakistan top order, with his working over and eventual eliminatio­n of veteran star Younis Khan a delight to watch.

‘‘He bowled beautifull­y – his setups to Younis Khan and [Azhar] Ali was great bowling,’’ NZ wicketkeep­er BJ Watling said.

The 27-year-old will be eyeing what would be just his fifth fivewicket bag in an innings in tests – his last was against England at Lord’s in May, 2013.

Wagner went over the century mark of test victims in the first test in Christchur­ch and picked up two more in successive deliveries – with Pakistan debutant Mohammad Rizwan making a golden duck.

Southee’s batting is less aesthetica­lly pleasing – a barrage of bouncers from Wahab Riaz had him hopping, swaying and swiping midafterno­on, with Pakistan skipper Azhar Ali employing his first slip on the boundary, expecting an edge to fly.

In among the evasive action there were the expected swats from Southee that raced to or cleared the rope. He got to 29 off 28 balls before Sohail Khan bowled his rival with a delicious slower ball out of the back of the hand that barely registered on the speed radar.

By contrast, it was the steady hand of Watling that guided New Zealand to what then seemed like a par score in their first innings.

The Black Caps were dismissed for 271 soon after tea, with Watling 49 not out. That left him agonisingl­y short of his 13th test halfcentur­y, but knowing he’d played a sterling role. Watling was looking to break a run of nine test innings without a 50, but when the second new ball helped Pakistan pick up the wickets of Matt Henry and Neil Wagner in quick succession, Watling had to be content with his unbeaten contributi­on which featured seven fours in 125 balls.

As expected, the 31-year-old – who was on Friday named ahead of Luke Ronchi as NZ’s ODI wicketkeep­er-batsman for the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy series against Australia – produced a mixture of solid defence and patient leaves, interspers­ed by enough scoring shots to keep New Zealand’s tally ticking upwards on a tricky wicket against a determined four-pronged pace attack.

‘‘That’s a pretty good day for us,’’ Watling said soon after stumps.

‘‘I thought the work we did with the ball tonight has put us into a pretty good position.

‘‘It was great to get through to 270 – we could have been bowled out for 200, 210, but if the tail chips in and plays positively it puts them under pressure. They bowled well and asked a lot of questions and every now and then it would just do something.

‘‘It was definitely a challenge and we’re pretty happy with 270 and getting the five wickets tonight really helps out.’’

The Black Caps lead the two-test series 1-0 after winning the first test in Christchur­ch.

 ?? PHOTOSPORT ?? Henry Nicholls leads the celebratio­ns after Pakistan debutant Mohammad Rizwan is caught for a golden duck during the second day of the second cricket test at Seddon Park in Hamilton yesterday.
PHOTOSPORT Henry Nicholls leads the celebratio­ns after Pakistan debutant Mohammad Rizwan is caught for a golden duck during the second day of the second cricket test at Seddon Park in Hamilton yesterday.
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