/ 21 March 2009

India win first Test by 10 wickets

Harbhajan Singh took six wickets for 63 runs as India beat New Zealand by 10 wickets in the first cricket Test on Saturday, posting its first Test win in New Zealand in 33 years to lead the three-match
series 1-0.

India led by 241 runs after its first innings when it reached 520 in reply to New Zealand’s 279, then dismissed the hosts for for 279 in its second innings to leave itself needing just 39 runs for victory on the fourth day.

Gautam Gambhir scored 30 and Virender Sehwag made 8 as India reached its winning target in just 5.2 overs. Sachin Tendulkar, who scored 160 in India’s first innings, was named man of the match.

New Zealand resumed its second innings on Saturday at 75-3, trailing India by 161 runs and slumped in the face of Harbhajan’s 23rd five-wicket Test haul to 199-8.

A 76-run, 10th-wicket partnership between Brendon McCullum, who top-scored with 84, and Iain O’Brien, who reached his best Tests score of 14, allowed New Zealand to avoid an innings defeat.

McCullum was the last man out and India was untroubled in reaching its winning target minutes ahead of the scheduled stumps time.

Harbhajan hastened New Zealand’s decline, taking five of the seven wickets to fall on Saturday, including those of Daniel Flynn for 67, Jesse
Ryder for 21 and Daniel Vettori for 21, eliminating the main obstacles to India’s victory.

Flynn’s posted his third Test half century and was the only New Zealand batsman early in the day to show the discipline and application necessary to save the match. When he was dismissed in the second session with New Zealand at 161-7, the match was lost.

”In every aspect India showed us how to do it in this Test match,” New Zealand captain Vettori said. ”We needed someone to fight really hard for us and unfortunately we never had that. Daniel [Flynn] was probably the only one, and Brendon later on. Against a side like India you need guys to bat a day and a half.”

McCullum produced some pugnacious late resistance and found a stoic partner in O’Brien, who stuck at the crease for an hour and 40 minutes, slowing India’s bid for victory. He helped New Zealand erase India’s first-innings lead and made it necessary for the tourists to bat again to seal their win.

McCullum batted for almost three hours and hit 11 fours in an innings which partly relieved New Zealand’s embarrassment at a comprehensive defeat.

”It’s pretty disappointing,” McCullum said. ”Playing at home you set high standards for yourself and we didn’t play to those standards.

”We pride ourselves on our fight and scrapping and I don’t think we fought and scrapped hard enough in this Test.”

India held a vice-like grip on the Test from the first day when, after winning the toss and making the unexpected decision to bowl first, it reduced New Zealand to 60-6 before lunch.

”We chose to field first and the bowlers proved that my decision was right,” India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni said. ”We got six early wickets and after lunch the pitch became easy to bat on and it wasn’t easy getting wickets after that.”

New Zealand captain Vettori (118) made his third Test century and Ryder (102) his first in a small comeback, but New Zealand’s first-innings total of 279 was never enough to pressure India.

Tendulkar’s magnificent innings — his 42nd test century and his 18th test innings in excess of 150 — gave India a commanding first-innings lead.

Gambhir, who made 72, Rahul Dravid, who made 66, and Zaheer Khan, who added 51, contributed to that advantage.

”I think the New Zealand bowlers bowled in the right areas. They didn’t get wickets but it was hard to score against them,” Dhoni said.

”That was the time Sachin was at his best. If there was a bad ball, he made the most out of it and he made it a point that their bowlers stayed long in the field.

”Overall it was a good team effort. Test cricket is all about winning session after session and obviously Sachin and Harbhajan performed exceedingly well.”

Harbhajan was seen as the greatest threat to New Zealand’s batsman on what had become a good batting pitch and his outstanding effort on Saturday clinched a comprehensive win.

India last claimed a Test at New Zealand in 1976, when it won by eight wickets at Auckland. It has not won a Test series in New Zealand since 1968.

The second Test starts in Napier on Thursday. – Sapa-AP