|
Vettori outwits England for crushing Test win
HAMILTON—New Zealand thrashed England by 189 runs in the first cricket
Test here Sunday when England's second innings disintegrated after Kyle
Mills ripped through the top order. Set a tempting target of 300 to win
in 81 overs, England were all out for 110 with 26 overs and a full
session of play remaining.
Ian Bell top scored with an unbeaten 54, one of only two batsmen to
reach double figures on a slow wicket. Mills finished with the
remarkable figures of four for 16 off 13 overs while Chris Martin took
three for 33 as New Zealand pulled off just their eighth victory over
England in 88 Tests. It was a performance engineered by New Zealand
skipper Daniel Vettori, the man of the match, who dictated the terms
from the time he won the toss and elected to bat.
He produced innings of 88 and 35 with the bat, and, bowling in tandem
with Jeetan Patel, he reduced England's scoring to a crawl in the first
innings. He then lured England into chasing a result with a timely
second innings declaration, which he said was made against the wishes of
coach John Bracewell. "Braces (Bracewell) wanted to keep batting but I
just yanked them in. It was a good feeling. It sent a nice message that
we wanted to be out there and we thought we were on top and by declaring
you send that message," Vettori said.
"When Kyle stepped up with four wickets, their top four, taking them out
of play meant the game was ours." New Zealand added 30 runs to their
overnight 147 before Vettori threw down the gauntlet at 177 for nine. It
was a challenge readily accepted as Alastair Cook reeled off three quick
boundaries and England raced to 18 off the first three overs, well ahead
of the required 3.7 run rate.
But four wickets in four overs from Mills put New Zealand firmly in
command and the inevitable end for England came just before the tea
break. "The batting from our side was obviously not acceptable but New
Zealand put us under a lot of pressure and bowled excellently," said
England captain Michael Vaughan who believed the declaration had given
England a chance.
"We felt 300, if we'd got a good start, if we'd got to 100 for one, then
the overs weren't going to have much relevance because if we kept
wickets in hand we could possibly have had a go at that. "But when you
lose four quick wickets to an outstanding new ball spell by Kyle Mills
it was always going to be difficult." Cook was first to fall to Mills,
chasing a wide delivery and edging the ball to Brendon McCullum behind
the stumps to be back in the pavillion for 13.
Two overs later England captain Michael Vaughan followed for nine,
trapped in front of the wickets, and Andrew Strauss scored two before he
was caught by McCullum. With England's hopes resting on Kevin Pietersen,
the marque player surprisingly failed to offer a shot to a Mills
delivery nipping back and the umpire had no option but to give him out
for six. The capitulation ended England's hope of pulling off a win,
leaving Bell and Paul Collingwood to set up a dogged defence in an
attempt to make the innings last through the final two sessions.
Collingwood survived 50 balls for just two runs before he was bowled by
Vettori and then Martin dismissed Tim Ambrose, Ryan Sidebottom and
Mathew Hoggard in quick succession to have England at 67 for eight.
While Bell remained defiant at one end, Steve Harmison added one to the
total before falling to Patel and the innings ended with Monty Panesar
caught behind for eight off Jacob Oram. Panesar at least had the
satisfaction of assisting Bell in a 33-run partnership, the biggest
stand in the England innings.
The only New Zealand wicket to fall in the morning was Vettori, caught
by Cook off Ryan Sidebottom to give the England new-ball bowler his
career best figures of six for 49 including a hattrick. It was also
Sidebottom's first 10-wicket match haul after taking four for 90 in New
Zealand's first innings of 470. The second Test of the three-match
series starts at Wellington's Basin Reserve on Thursday.—Agencies |