Sundar in seventh heaven as India restrict NZ to 259
Spinner’s seven-wicket haul vindicates his selection and boosts hosts’ hopes of squaring series against the Black Caps
24 October 2024 - 14:38
byShrivathsa Sridhar
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Washington Sundar of India. Picture: AAP IMAGES/DARREN ENGLAND/REUTERS
Bengaluru — India’s Washington Sundar claimed a career-best seven-wicket haul and spin partner Ravichandran Ashwin took three to dismiss New Zealand for 259 before the hosts reached 16-1 at stumps on the opening day of the second Test in Pune on Thursday.
India lost Rohit Sharma early, the skipper bowled by Tim Southee for a nine-ball duck, but Shubman Gill was unbeaten on 10 with Yashasvi Jaiswal six not out at the end of an absorbing day.
Brought into the side in place of Kuldeep Yadav after India’s eight-wicket defeat in the series opener in Bengaluru, Washington justified his selection by scything through New Zealand’s middle and lower order to finish with 7/59.
Ashwin took 3/64 as India made the most of the turn and grip on offer at the Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium to dismiss the tourists cheaply after they were well placed at 197/3.
Devon Conway, who fell nine runs short of a century in the first innings of the Black Caps’ series-opening victory, made 76 while Rachin Ravindra scored 65 before Washington took charge and put India in a strong position.
Ravindra scored 134 and 39 not out in the first Test and picked up from where he left off, reaching his fifty with back-to-back fours off Akash Deep as India’s shoulders started to droop late in the afternoon.
Unplayable deliveries
Washington lifted the gloom with a couple of unplayable deliveries that castled Ravindra and Tom Blundell (3) in a 10-minute spell before tea.
He returned after the break to remove Daryl Mitchell (18), Glenn Phillips (9), Southee (5) and Ajaz Patel (4) and leave the tourists shell-shocked.
Mitchell Santner was the last to fall after an entertaining 33, the left-hander's stumps shattered by another peach of a delivery from Washington.
Conway earlier reached his third fifty in four innings with a driven boundary on the first delivery after lunch from Jasprit Bumrah, and he hit him for two more in the same over.
He also deployed the reverse sweep to good effect but was caught behind after a misjudged drive off Ashwin, who bagged his 531st wicket to surpass Australia’s Nathan Lyon and sit seventh on the all-time list.
New Zealand opted to bat and made a good start as new permanent captain Tom Latham and Conway safely negotiated the fast bowlers, but India hit back by introducing spin after seven overs.
Ashwin had captain Latham trapped plumb in front of the wicket for 15 with a delivery that drifted and turned, while Washington also got early assistance from the black-soil wicket.
New Zealand kept rotating the strike, punishing the rare bad delivery, before Ashwin struck again by having Will Young caught behind for 18 after a successful review when the batsman had attempted to tickle one down the leg side.
India have won their last 18 home series since 2012 but that record is on the line after they lost the opening Test. The final match is in Mumbai in early November.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Sundar in seventh heaven as India restrict NZ to 259
Spinner’s seven-wicket haul vindicates his selection and boosts hosts’ hopes of squaring series against the Black Caps
Bengaluru — India’s Washington Sundar claimed a career-best seven-wicket haul and spin partner Ravichandran Ashwin took three to dismiss New Zealand for 259 before the hosts reached 16-1 at stumps on the opening day of the second Test in Pune on Thursday.
India lost Rohit Sharma early, the skipper bowled by Tim Southee for a nine-ball duck, but Shubman Gill was unbeaten on 10 with Yashasvi Jaiswal six not out at the end of an absorbing day.
Brought into the side in place of Kuldeep Yadav after India’s eight-wicket defeat in the series opener in Bengaluru, Washington justified his selection by scything through New Zealand’s middle and lower order to finish with 7/59.
Ashwin took 3/64 as India made the most of the turn and grip on offer at the Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium to dismiss the tourists cheaply after they were well placed at 197/3.
Devon Conway, who fell nine runs short of a century in the first innings of the Black Caps’ series-opening victory, made 76 while Rachin Ravindra scored 65 before Washington took charge and put India in a strong position.
Ravindra scored 134 and 39 not out in the first Test and picked up from where he left off, reaching his fifty with back-to-back fours off Akash Deep as India’s shoulders started to droop late in the afternoon.
Unplayable deliveries
Washington lifted the gloom with a couple of unplayable deliveries that castled Ravindra and Tom Blundell (3) in a 10-minute spell before tea.
He returned after the break to remove Daryl Mitchell (18), Glenn Phillips (9), Southee (5) and Ajaz Patel (4) and leave the tourists shell-shocked.
Mitchell Santner was the last to fall after an entertaining 33, the left-hander's stumps shattered by another peach of a delivery from Washington.
Conway earlier reached his third fifty in four innings with a driven boundary on the first delivery after lunch from Jasprit Bumrah, and he hit him for two more in the same over.
He also deployed the reverse sweep to good effect but was caught behind after a misjudged drive off Ashwin, who bagged his 531st wicket to surpass Australia’s Nathan Lyon and sit seventh on the all-time list.
New Zealand opted to bat and made a good start as new permanent captain Tom Latham and Conway safely negotiated the fast bowlers, but India hit back by introducing spin after seven overs.
Ashwin had captain Latham trapped plumb in front of the wicket for 15 with a delivery that drifted and turned, while Washington also got early assistance from the black-soil wicket.
New Zealand kept rotating the strike, punishing the rare bad delivery, before Ashwin struck again by having Will Young caught behind for 18 after a successful review when the batsman had attempted to tickle one down the leg side.
India have won their last 18 home series since 2012 but that record is on the line after they lost the opening Test. The final match is in Mumbai in early November.
Reuters
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