Wednesday, February 10, 2010, Safar 25, 1431 A.H   ISSN 1563-9479
 Group Chairman: Mir Javed Rahman Founded by: Mir Khalil-ur-Rahman Editor-in-Chief: Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman 
HOME | TOP STORIES | WORLD | NATIONAL | BUSINESS |  SPORTS |  KARACHI | LAHORE | ISLAMABADPESHAWAREDITORIAL | OPINION | STOCK INSTEP TODAY  NEWSPOST
  WEEKLY SECTIONS
    News on Sunday
    You
    Health Body & Mind
    Technobytes
    Iqra
    Galaxy
    Tapestry
    Education-Zine
    Us
    Cyber@print
    Investor's J.
    Viewers' Forum
    Today's Cartoon
    Style
    Business & Finance Review
    Instep
    MAG Fashion
    Blog
  FEATURES
   Opinion Archive
   Fashion Archive
   Magazine Archive
   Style Archive

  FINANCE
   Currency Rates
   KSE Index
   Bullion Rates
   Prize Bonds

 
New Zealand 276-6 at stumps in 1st Test vs Pakistan
  Updated at: 1200 PST, Tuesday, November 24, 2009  
  DUNEDIN: Pakistan paceman Mohammad Asif celebrated his international cricket recall with three vital wickets to have New Zealand at 276-6 at stumps on the first day of the first Test here Tuesday.

Only a fielding lapse denied him a fourth wicket as New Zealand struggled through the first day after being sent into bat in reasonable conditions.

Daniel Vettori escaped a golden duck in one of three dropped catches that proved costly for Pakistan and allowed New Zealand to build two solid partnerships and recover from a first-ball dismissal.

Ross Taylor and Martin Guptill staged a 117-run rescue stand for the third wicket, while Vettori and Brendon McCullum had put on an unbroken 65 for the seventh wicket.

At stumps Vettori was on 40 and McCullum on 25 after successfully appealing against an lbw dismissal on the penultimate ball of the day.

But around them the New Zealand batting had a familiar air of frailty as Asif posted three for 76 off 24 overs. Mohammad Aamir had two for 62 and Umar Gul, although wicketless, bowled seven maidens in his first nine overs.

Asif, who arrived in New Zealand vowing to repair a promising career that had been stalled by injury and drug scandals, took wickets in the first and last sessions of the day.

But it was the 17-year-old Mohammad Aamir who took the early plaudits after Mohammad Yousuf won the toss and put New Zealand into bat.

Aamir justified the decision with the opening delivery when he yorked Tim McIntosh with a ball that ricocheted from the toe of the bat to the leg stump.

Asif followed in the sixth over with the wicket of Daniel Flynn who, on eight from two boundaries, played down the wrong line and sent an inside edge to wicketkeeper Kamram Akmal to leave New Zealand on two for 27.

Taylor and Guptill dragged New Zealand out of the mire in a defiant 44-over stand that ended when Guptill fell for 60, his maiden Test half-century.

He survived two chances on 26, with Imran Farhat missing a regulation catch at first slip off Umar Gul, and then Gul misjudged a chance on the fine-leg boundary that landed just over the rope for six.

Guptill was eventually undone when he top-edged Aamir to Fawad Alam running backwards at square leg.
 
  Send this story to Friend   |   Print Version
Share this story!   

  More Updates
 Honda expands airbag recall to additional 378,000 US cars Updated at: 0300 PST
 NIC compulsory to get sugar from USC outlets Updated at: 0230 PST
 Obama threatens 'significant regime' of Iran sanctions Updated at: 0200 PST
 Assailants attacked on Sheikh Rashid identified Updated at: 0130 PST
 President, PM chair meeting on political, development issues Updated at: 0100 PST
 US warns China against 'stillborn' climate deal Updated at: 30 PST
Google
 

The News Home  |  Jang Group Online  |  Jang Multimedia  |  Jang Searchable  |  Ad Tariff / Enquiry |  Editor Internet  |  Webmaster