Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

COOK AWARE OF HOW CLOSE ENGLAND CAME TO EMBARRASSM­ENT

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They put some pressure on us, but if you look at the shots it was pretty poor shot selection, or probably more poor shot execution, you can pretty much describe it as soft dismissals

DUNEDIN (Reuters) - England captain Alastair Cook was acutely aware that his side had narrowly avoided an embarrassi­ng first test loss to New Zealand in Dunedin yesterday and that the series may be more competitiv­e than they first thought.

Brendon McCullum's side, routed in South Africa late last year in a test series that witnessed them capitulate for 45 runs in one innings, were six places below Cook's second ranked team heading into the test last Wednesday.

After losing the first day to rain, New Zealand's bowlers ran through the vaunted England batting lineup, who appeared cavalier in their approach, to dismiss them for a paltry 167 in a first innings which was boosted by a 47-run ninth wicket partnershi­p between Steven Finn and James Anderson.

“They put some pressure on us, but if you look at the shots it was pretty poor shot selection, or probably more poor shot execution, you can pretty much describe it as soft dismissals,” Cook said. “If you do that against any team you pay the price.” New Zealand's new opening pair of debutant Hamish Rutherford

and the recalled Peter Fulton, a pair that had been expected to be targeted by Finn and Anderson, then took the match away from the visitors when they put on 158 for the first wicket.

Rutherford went on to score 171 and the speed in which he paced his innings enabled McCullum to make a declaratio­n at 460 for nine, a lead of 293 runs and with almost two days to try and bowl the visitors out to achieve a massive upset.

“When you get bowled out for 160odd in the first innings on a good wicket you are always going to be struggling in the game and facing an uphill battle just to save the game,” Cook said.

“We certainly felt after day (two), they were 130 for none, we thought it was pretty much dam- age limitation from there on. “You are never really going to win a game from that situation.” A benign pitch and a far more stoic attitude from England in their second innings helped the tourists. Cook scored 116 and shared in a 231-run stand with Nick Compton, before Finn scored 56 and occupied the crease for nearly five hours as nightwatch­man to ensure the visitors go into the second test in Wellington on even terms.

 ??  ?? England team captain Alastair Cook (C) leads members of his team off the ground at the end of the first test against New Zealand at the University Oval in Dunedin - REUTERS
England team captain Alastair Cook (C) leads members of his team off the ground at the end of the first test against New Zealand at the University Oval in Dunedin - REUTERS
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