The New Zealand Herald

Test team needs to harness scowling Sears

- Andrew Alderson at Hagley Oval

The New Zealand test cricket team must harness Ben Sears’ fury for batters in the coming years.

The 26-year-old showed in his debut against Australia that he has a fast bowler’s scowl to make opponents wither, and pace in the mid-140km/h range to prove that grimace is no facade.

Then, when Sears takes wickets, his level of euphoria escalates to leave the impression he has rescued a winning Lotto ticket from the trash.

A gritty duel unfolded as Australia beat New Zealand by three wickets in the second fixture at Christchur­ch. They chased 279 to win before tea on day four to take the series 2-0.

Sears, test cap No 287, offered consolatio­n for the hosts in the second innings. He finished with figures of 4-90 from 17 overs and ended the match with 5-161 from 33.

He demonstrat­ed enough speed, accuracy and tenacity to suggest he can succeed at test level.

Add 29-year-old Kyle Jamieson, 22-year-old Will O’Rourke and 32-year-old drinks-carrier-turned-attack-godfather Matt Henry and the depth looks capable as New Zealand transition from years luxuriatin­g in the Tim Southee-Trent Boult-Neil Wagner triumvirat­e.

Sears removed Steve Smith lbw in the first innings as his third test delivery torpedoed into the opener's pads.

In the second dig, he forced Marnus Labuschagn­e into a caught-and-bowled after a spill by first slip Daryl Mitchell two balls earlier, then Cam Green chopped on as he dithered over whether to play in the corridor of uncertaint­y.

Sears also generated the breakthrou­ghs which briefly brought New Zealand back into the match at 220-7 yesterday.

He trapped Mitchell Marsh lbw for 80 with pace on an almost yorker length, and forced Mitchell Starc to squeeze a catch to Will Young at short backward square leg next ball.

The right-armer received a standing ovation from a raucous and expectant “work from home” Monday crowd. He donned his sleeveless pullover and rode the applause around the boundary.

Captain Tim Southee offered Sears counsel through the test at mid-off.

“I’ve seen him in the T20s and he’s been around Wellington for a while but it was great to have him perform at test level,” Southee said.

“Coming on at the end to give us two wickets from two balls and a sniff late in the day shows what he’s about.

“He’s got plenty of ticker for a young guy and I was stoked for him to play tests and have that immediate impact.”

Sears also caught player-of-thematch Alex Carey’s attention.

“I thought he had a great debut. He got thrown the ball late and brought them back into the game.”

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