Hawke's Bay Today

Carnage at the crease

Spinner Yasir takes 10 wickets in a day to leave Black Caps staring at heavy test defeat

- Danyal Rasool

Yasir Shah’s legspin defined the third day of the Dubai test against New Zealand in a manner that would have made his childhood hero Shane Warne beam with pride.

The Pakistan spinner became the first bowler since Anil Kumble, in 1999, to take 10 wickets in a day, eight of them coming in a remarkable passage of play that sent New Zealand spiralling from 50 for no loss to 90 all out. New Zealand found respite in the follow-on through an unbroken 65-run third-wicket partnershi­p between Ross Taylor and Tom Latham. But all that did was make sure they could go into the fourth day last night without the match already being a lost cause.

The harbinger of the remarkable day would be an over of pure sorcery from Yasir, which completely changed the tide of the match from a gritty, even contest to one that New Zealand are now resigned to battle for their lives in.

He lay waste to a dogged opening partnershi­p with a flurry of wickets that tore through New Zealand’s middle order. The 50-run partnershi­p between Jeet Raval and Tom Latham had ended after Raval clumsily dragged the ball back on to the stumps off Yasir, but the real magic was yet to happen.

In the penultimat­e over before lunch, the legspinner ripped through Latham, Ross Taylor and Henry Nicholls to leave New Zealand tottering at 63 for 4 at the break.

It began with the first ball of the over, when he drew Latham into a prod and Imam-ul-Haq scooped up a catch at short leg.

That opened up the opportunit­y to toy with the new batsmen; Taylor’s second delivery was a ball that evoked memories of Warne to Mike Gatting. It pitched around middle and leg before spinning past the dead bat Taylor was offering to it to clatter into off stump.

Nicholls’ second delivery, too, was the stuff of nightmares, screaming through the gap between bat and pad to smash into middle stump.

After lunch, Yasir sliced through the New Zealand innings, finishing with the third-best figures in Pakistan’s history. New Zealand could add just 27 runs to their lunch tally of 63 for 4, with Yasir responsibl­e for four more wickets. He finished with 8 for 41, giving Pakistan a monumental 328-run lead.

Kane Williamson played a lone, forlorn hand at the other end, seemingly batting on a different pitch, but could do little about the carnage unfolding around him as his side lost 10 wickets for 40 runs to be bowled out for 90.

With BJ Watling and the skipper himself being the last specialist batsmen at the crease as the second session commenced, how that partnershi­p went was to be pivotal to New Zealand’s hopes in the test.

Four balls after lunch, Watling was run out after a devastatin­g mix-up with his captain, and even luck went Yasir’s way as the ball he fumbled with went on to hit the stumps anyway.

Williamson tried to get the score to three figures whenever he had the strike, but with no other player able to cope with Yasir’s heat, he was destined to remain a helpless onlooker as Pakistan took a monstrous lead, and instructed New Zealand to follow on.

Yasir remained at his mesmerisin­g best for most of the session, but when he tailed off at the end,

Taylor was there to punish him.

Two consecutiv­e deliveries in the day’s last half hour went for four and six, and it was the only time all day when Yasir looked slightly tired.

Earlier in the innings, there were fears that New Zealand could be run through a second time, particular­ly when Raval and Williamson became the ninth and 10th wickets for Yasir.

It was a day that began with rain and ended with darkness.

That’s fitting enough for New Zealand, who will remember day three by those gloomy images anyway.

 ?? Photos / AP ?? Ish Sodhi joined a parade of New Zealand batsmen on the way back to the pavilion as Yasir Shah (inset) had his way in a remarkable day of test cricket in Dubai.
Photos / AP Ish Sodhi joined a parade of New Zealand batsmen on the way back to the pavilion as Yasir Shah (inset) had his way in a remarkable day of test cricket in Dubai.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand