Weekend Herald

‘Hoff ’ has NZ batters all at sea

- Andrew Alderson at Hagley Oval

The ironic applause as Matt Henry and Tim Southee threw their bats at the ball in a hit-and-hope ninth-wicket partnershi­p of 55 was an indictment on New Zealand’s 162-run first innings capitulati­on against Australia on the opening day of the second test.

The plea of a fan echoed in front of an Antarctic media tent yesterday as the easterly came in off the long run: “Excuse me Mr Hazlewood, please don’t take any more wickets.”

Josh Hazlewood refused to oblige the foghorn on the embankment.

How could he, given the state of New Zealand’s middle order batting?

The man known in Australian circles as “The Hoff ”, due to an ambling running style resembling the former Baywatch hero, must have looked more like something created in Victor Frankenste­in’s laboratory to the Black Caps taking strike.

The 33-year-old right-armer hounded anything wielding willow.

Elements of Glenn McGrath’s needling and Curtly Ambrose’s bounce seemed to bind in a DNA double helix to create a metronomic figure who returned indomitabl­e figures of 5-31 from 13.2 overs.

Hazlewood forced Tom Latham to nibble at a delivery from around the wicket; Kane Williamson was beaten lbw by a ball angling in; Daryl Mitchell was squared up to edge a snorter moving away off the seam; and Matt Henry snicked off the back foot to complete the side’s unravellin­g.

The inexcusabl­e dismissal in the portfolio came via Rachin Ravindra. He looked to flay Hazlewood down the ground in an extravagan­t drive which lacked footwork and any sense of responsibi­lity before lunch.

The “c Khawaja b Hazlewood 4” dismissal bore an air of deja vu to the “c Lyon b Hazlewood 0” from the first innings in Wellington. The world champion Australian­s don’t suddenly forget a weakness or a vice.

In other cases, New Zealand displayed all the applicatio­n of a truant kicking a can down the road.

The hosts’ shot selection, or lack thereof, was key as a mixture of illdiscipl­ined batting, poor defence and ruthless bowling took hold.

White-ball aggression appeared to usurp red-ball resilience. Tom Blundell and Glenn Phillips produced ditto moments off Cam Green and Mitchell Starc respective­ly, gloving attempted pulls behind.

The shame of the contagion from

71-2 to 107-8 was that Will Young and Latham eked out an opening stand of

47. That sturdy contributi­on offered a false promise of what was to come.

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