Latham, Williamson lead strong New Zealand reply

KANPUR, India, (Reuters) – Captain Kane Williamson and opener Tom Latham led a strong New Zealand reply with unbeaten half-centuries before rain washed out the final session of the second day of the first test against India yesterday.

The pair shared an unbroken 117-run stand to take New Zealand to 152 for one at tea before it started drizzling at Kanpur’s Green Park Stadium and no further play was possible.

India’s Mohammed Shami is bowled all ends up by New Zealand’s Trent Boult in India’s first innings. (Reuters photo)
India’s Mohammed Shami is bowled all ends up by New Zealand’s Trent Boult in India’s first innings. (Reuters photo)

Having bowled out the hosts for 318, New Zealand lost Martin Guptill (21) before lunch but the left-right combination of Latham and Williamson negated the home spinners with aplomb.

Latham was unbeaten on 56 with Williamson on 65 as New Zealand trailing India by 166 runs with nine wickets in hand.

“We were disciplined, we stuck to the gameplans. When the Indian bowlers missed, we jumped all over,” New Zealand batting coach Craig McMillan told reporters.

“The way they rotated the strike, their left hand-right hand combination throughout the partnership was crucial.”

Guptill could not convert the start he got and was trapped lbw by a full, swinging delivery from Umesh Yadav.

Latham and Williamson, however, looked comfortable against the spinners who did manage a few leg-before appeals but could not separate them.

The batsmen brought up their individual fifties in successive overs, but not before Latham had survived a scare.

He went for a sweep shot against Ravindra Jadeja and the deflection hit his boot and popped up for Lokesh Rahul to take the catch at short leg.

The decision was referred to the third umpire who ruled in the batsman’s favour after replays suggested the ball had touched the chin strap of Rahul’s helmet.

According to regulations, parts of protective gear must not come into play while taking a catch.

India’s batting coach Sanjay Bangar said an early wicket was all the home team needed when play resumes today.

“It’s a matter of getting that breakthrough and putting the pressure back on them,” said Bangar.

“We were in a similar position wherein we were 150-odd for one at one point of time. Obviously when the ball starts to get older and the batsmen tire a bit, you get a breakthrough and it can be a different ball game.”

Resuming on 291 for nine, the Indian tail wagged to take the hosts past 300.

With number 11 Yadav (nine) at the other end, Jadeja (42 not out) took the onus of scoring on himself, contributing 26 of the 27 runs India added to their overnight score.

Jadeja hit Mitchell Santner for a six but could not get to his second test half century as Neil Wagner had Yadav caught behind to end a 41-run partnership for the last wicket.

Scoreboard

India 1st innings (Overnight: 291-9)
L. Rahul c Watling b Santner             32
M. Vijay c Watling b Sodhi             65
C. Pujara c&b Santner             62
V. Kohli c Sodhi b Wagner               9
A. Rahane c Latham b Craig             18
Ro. Sharma c Sodhi b Santner             35
R. Ashwin c Taylor b Boult             40
W. Saha b Boult                   0
R. Jadeja not out                 42
M. Shami b Boult                   0
U. Yadav c Watling b Wagner               9
Extras (b-5 lb-1)                   6
Total (all out, 97 overs)                        318
Fall of wickets: 1-42 L. Rahul,2-154 C. Pujara,3-167 V. Kohli,4-185 M. Vijay,5-209 A. Rahane,6-261 Ro. Sharma,7-262 W. Saha,8-273 R. Ashwin,9-277 M. Shami,10-318 U. Yadav
Bowling: T. Boult 20 – 3 – 67 – 3 N. Wagner 15 – 4 – 42 – 2 M. Santner 23 – 2 – 94 – 3 M. Craig 24 – 6 – 59 – 1 I. Sodhi 15 – 3 – 50 – 1

New Zealand 1st innings
M. Guptill lbw b U. Yadav             21
T. Latham not out                 56
K. Williamson not out                 65
Extras (b-8 lb-1 nb-1)                 10
Total (for 1 wickets, 47 overs)                    152
Fall of wickets: 1-35 M. Guptill To bat: R. Taylor, L. Ronchi, M. Santner, B. Watling, M. Craig, I. Sodhi, T. Boult, N. Wagner
Bowling: M. Shami 8 – 1 – 26 – 0 U. Yadav 7 – 2 – 22 – 1 R. Jadeja 17 – 1 – 47 – 0(nb-1) R. Ashwin 14 – 1 – 43 – 0 M. Vijay 1 – 0 – 5 – 0
Referees Umpire: Richard Kettleborough
Umpire: Rod Tucker TV umpire: Anil Chaudhary Match referee: David Boon