Ryder and Williamson head Kiwi fightback

AHMEDABAD, India, (Reuters) – Jesse Ryder and debutant  Kane Williamson defied India with a fifth-wicket partnership of  194 to take New Zealand past the follow-on mark on the third day  of the first test yesterday.

At the close New Zealand were 331 for five in their first  innings, trailing the home side by 156.

Ryder (103) and Williamson (87 not out) defied the Indian  bowlers after New Zealand had been reduced to 137 for four in  reply to India’s first innings 487.

Left-hander Ryder, who had Ross Taylor as a runner during  the later part of his innings, brought up his third test  century, each of them against India, with a cover-driven  boundary off Shanthakumaran Sreesanth. However, two deliveries later Sreesanth got his revenge when  he made the ball straighten after pitching and caught Ryder  plumb in front of the stumps.

The burly Ryder had grown in confidence as his innings  progressed after surviving a chance on 11 when Rahul Dravid  dropped him at a wide slip position off Sreesanth.

Williamson, 20, was particularly impressive with his  footwork against the Indian spinners but he could consider  himself lucky to survive a caught behind appeal on 56 against  left-arm seamer Zaheer Khan. Television replays showed a healthy edge and deviation as  the ball passed the bat but debutant test umpire Kumar  Dharmasena was unmoved.

India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni utilised all his  resources, including throwing the ball to Sachin Tendulkar to  bowl his leg-spinners, but failed to break the partnership.

India’s only other wickets in the day came before lunch when  the spinners dismissed Brendon McCullum and Ross Taylor after  their century stand for the third wicket.

McCullum (65) and Taylor (56), the most accomplished of the New Zealand batsmen, stitched together a 104-run partnership before the latter drove Harbhajan Singh straight to Vangipurappu Laxman at short midwicket.

McCullum had looked solid, using his feet well against the spinners during his 122-ball stay at the wicket, and hit 11 boundaries in his knock.

However, he dragged his feet out trying to defend a left-arm spinner Pragyan Ojha’s delivery that spun across his bat. Dhoni made no mistake behind the stumps.