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West
Indies, Australia 1st Test — Day 1
Ponting century puts Aussies on
top
BRISBANE—Ricky Ponting rescued Australia from an early batting collapse
with a captain’s century on the opening day of the first test against
West Indies on Thursday.
Ponting produced a knock of 149 after Australia’s new-look batting
line-up had crumbled, guiding his team out of danger to a healthy 340
for seven by stumps.
Fast bowler Corey Collymore ripped through the middle order with four
for 47. His fellow pacemen Daren Powell, Fidel Edwards and Jermaine
Lawson captured one wicket each after Shivnarine Chanderpaul’s
surprising decision to field first on a pitch tailor-made for batting.
Australia Vice-Captain Adam Gilchrist made a typically brisk 44 during a
104-run partnership with Ponting while opener Matthew Hayden chipped in
with a more cautious 37 in a 92-run stand with the skipper.
“We’ve probably got a decent first innings total already but hopefully
we can start well tomorrow morning and push on towards 400”.
Shane Warne (31) and Brett Lee (19) continued their recent form with the
bat with an unbroken 46-run partnership in the last hour, but none of
the other specialist batsmen made a meaningful contribution.
Opener Mike Hussey made one on his test debut, Michael Clarke fell for
five, Simon Katich went for a duck and all rounder Shane Watson departed
for 16, raising fresh concerns about the depth of Australia’s batting
after their Ashes loss to England.
“We just didn’t get the really big partnership that we wanted,” Ponting
said.
“We lost a cluster of wickets in the middle, which is a bit of a worry,
but hopefully those guys will get a chance to rectify that in the second
innings”.
Called into the side when Justin Langer ruled himself out with a broken
rib, Hussey departed in the sixth over when he top-edged an attempted
pull shot off Powell and wicketkeeper Denesh Ramdin safely held the
catch.
Clarke was also caught behind, nicking a swift leg-cutter from Collymore,
then Katich glanced a low catch to Chris Gayle at second slip. Australia
had lost three for 10 in three overs after lunch to slump to 111 for
four.
Collymore also captured the vital wickets of Hayden and Gilchrist when
they were in full swing, both lbw, while Edwards trapped Watson lbw and
Lawson ended Ponting’s defiant innings when he flicked a catch straight
to Ramnaresh Sarwan at mid-wicket.
“I’m happy with the way I bowled but this is a team game,” Collymore
said.
“It’s not a bad position that we’re in but it could have been better. We
really should have capitalised when we had them four down”.
Ponting survived two dropped catches and a run-out attempt to register
his 24th test hundred and join Greg Chappell in fourth place on
Australia’s list of century-makers.
He reached triple figures off 131 balls with a square cut off Gayle that
sped to the boundary rope.
“It was a strange innings for me. I felt like I started really well but
I got worse as I went, which is a bit unusual in this game because it
usually it goes the other way,” Ponting said.
“But whenever you make a hundred it’s important, especially when wickets
are falling around you, so I was pleased to get there because it’s put
the team’s in a good position”.—Agencies |