… Daniel Vettori picks up five wickets
(REUTERS) – New Zealand’s Brendon McCullum stood firm with his sixth Test hundred yesterday to leave the second Test against India evenly poised. At the close on the penultimate day, New Zealand reached 237 for four wickets to take an overall lead of 115. McCullum (124) and Kane Williamson (12) were at the crease.
McCullum and his opening partner Tim McIntosh wiped off India’s lead of 122 runs with their first century partnership of the series.
An attacking McCullum and a watchful McIntosh (49) added 125 runs for the first wicket before the latter got an inside edge off his pads to be caught at short leg off Pragyan Ojha.
Right-handed McCullum used his feet well against the Indian spinners and hit 11 boundaries and three sixes during his unbeaten knock. He toned down his approach as the ball got old and the hosts started making regular breakthroughs.
India’s Sachin Tendulkar was confident that the hosts would be able to dismiss the visitors cheaply today morning and go on to win the match.
“We have done it in the past and I don’t see any reason why we can’t do it tomorrow. I feel there will be some pressure on New Zealand to play the first session well,” Tendulkar told Neo Cricket channel.
“The New Zealanders are here to fight and they are not going to give it away so easily. We will have to really put up a good fight and keep the pressure on.”
Ojha picked up his second wicket when Martin Guptill (18) got an edge to India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni behind the stumps.
Shanthakumaran Sreesanth reverse-swung the ball to breach Ross Taylor’s (7) defence while Jesse Ryder (20) edged part-time off-spinner Suresh Raina to Dhoni.
India’s attack was handicapped by the absence of paceman Zaheer Khan, who could not bowl later in the day after a lengthy absence off the field. He left the ground midway through his fifth over, suffering an abdominal strain.
“Zaheer is fine and will be able to bowl tomorrow. He felt some sort of a strain,” Tendulkar said.
HARBHAJAN HEROICS
Earlier, spinner Harbhajan Singh shone with the bat once more as he hit his second consecutive hundred to extend India’s first innings lead on the fourth morning at the Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium.
The Indian off-spinner continued tormenting the visitors with an unbeaten 111, following scores of 69 and 115 in the first Test, and bludgeoned the New Zealand attack with seven fours and seven sixes to bring up his second Test century.
Harbhajan added 105 runs for the final wicket with Sreesanth, who provided able support with 24 off 71 deliveries, before the hosts were dismissed for 472 in response to New Zealand’s 350.
New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori (5-135) trapped Sreesanth leg-before to complete his 19th five-wicket haul in Tests.
The three-match series is tied at 0-0 after the opening Test at Ahmedabad was drawn. The third and final Test will be played in Nagpur from November 20 to 24.
NEW ZEALAND first innings 350 (T. McIntosh 102,
M. Guptill 85, J. Ryder 70; Z. Khan 4-69, H. Singh 4-76)
INDIA first innings (o/n 436-9)
G. Gambhir c Hopkins b Southee 54
V. Sehwag b Vettori 96
R. Dravid lbw b Southee 45
S. Tendulkar c Taylor b Vettori 13
VVS Laxman lbw b Martin 74
S. Raina c Guptill b Vettori 20
MS Dhoni c McCullum b Vettori 14
H. Singh not out 111
Z. Khan c Arnel b Southee 7
P. Ojha run-out 0
S. Sreesanth lbw b Vettori 24
Extras: (b-4, lb-8, w-1, nb-1) 14
Total: (all out, 143.4 overs) 472
Fall of wickets: 1-160, 2-160, 3-184, 4-259, 5-311, 6-326, 7-336, 8-355, 9-367.
Bowling: Martin 29-6-87-1 (nb-1), Southee 33-6-119-3 (w-1), Arnel 24-5-79-0, Vettori 49.4-5-135-5, Williamson 7-0-31-0, Taylor 1-0-9-0.
NEW ZEALAND second innings
T. McIntosh c sub b Ojha 49
B. McCullum not out 124
M. Guptill c Dhoni b Ojha 18
R. Taylor b Sreesanth 7
J. Ryder c Dhoni b Raina 20
K. Williamson not out 12
Extras: (lb-2, w-2, nb-3) 7
Total: (four wickets; 75 overs) 237
Fall of wickets: 1-125, 2-174, 3-187, 4-221.
Bowling: Khan 4.3-1-12-0, Sreesanth 17-3-70-1 (nb-3, w-2), Ojha 25.3-8-60-2, Harbhajan 23-2-79-0, Tendulkar 2-0-7-0, Raina 3-0-7-1.