New Zealand v Australia: first Test, day two – live | Australia cricket team

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WICKET! Latham b Starc 5 (New Zealand 12-1)

Starc strikes! He’d been hit for a boundary in the previous ball so summoned a bit of extra venom on the next. It rushed in on Latham and he had to play, chopping it onto his stumps. First blood to the visitors! That brings the Black Caps’ champion Kane Williamson to the crease in his 99th Test looking for a fifth consecutive Test ton.

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5th over: New Zealand 8-0 (Latham 1, Young 7) First boundary! Starc strayed onto the pads a little and Latham punished him with a pull shot to the rope. That brought the crowd to their feet.

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4th over: New Zealand 8-0 (Latham 1, Young 7) Latham takes a sharp single from Hazlewood’s first ball and the bowler responds with a fast lifter that eludes the groping bat of Will Young. He recovers to work two runs down the legside. Hazlewood is now the world’s No 5 bowler behind Bumrah, Ashwin, Rabada and Cummins.

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3rd over: New Zealand 5-0 (Latham 0, Young 5) After 15 Tests and seven fifties, Will Young is still looking for his maiden Test century. Is today the day? No better time to score it, with his team still stunned by that first session flogging. And no greater attack to score it against than an Australian attack so feared they’ve become “a cartel.” Starc is attacking the stumps here, landing it on a nice full length at a consistent speed in the mid-140s. He delivers consecutive maidens, not something we get to type too often.

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2nd over: New Zealand 5-0 (Latham 0, Young 5) Here comes newly christened allrounder Josh Hazlewood, primed to follow-up his excellent 22 run knock with a few wickets. Alas, it isn’t to be – yet. Will Young brings the Hoff back to earth with a well-timed midwicket clip for four. First runs to the Kiwis.

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1st over: New Zealand 0-0 (Latham 0, Young 0) And we’re back! Starc sprays a few about before zinging a 145kph yorker at Tim Latham’s pads. He survives, as a man averaging 40 from his 78 Tests should. Can;’t score from the rest though. A maiden plays out.

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1st over: New Zealand 0-0 (Latham 0, Young 0) And we’re back! It will be Mitchell Starc to Tom Latham to get us underway. As is his custom, Starc sprays a few around before zinging a 145kph yorker into Latham’s pads. The Canterbury wicketkeeper-batter keeps it out. He is averaging 40 from his 78 Tests but Latham can’t score from Starcin this over and a maiden plays out.

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LUNCH: Australia all out for 383.

What a session that was! With No 11 Josh Hazlewood at the wicket, plenty of life left in the pitch and a ball five-overs old in their hands, everything pointed to New Zealand wrapping up the Australia innings quickly. Instead, the visitors tore up the script.

Hazlewood endured, then prospered, defending with ease and attacking at will. But it was Cameron Green who tore out the Kiwi’s heart. Right from the get-go he controlled the tempo of the game superbly, farming the strike while flaying the Kiwi attack all over the ground. It was a brilliant knock of 174 and it might’ve gone on and on and on.

But after 146 minutes and 116 runs, the Black Caps finally bagged their bunny just before lunch. Now, after the humiliation of that first session, their batters must recover and reset to find the energy to chase down this hugely-inflated total of 383. And they must do it against Cummins, Starc and Hazlewood, the greatest pace attack in the game.

But hey, it’s still day two and this Test is very much alive with a long way to go. New Zealand have a formidable batting line-up but can their key men deliver after that battering? We’ll break for a bit. See you in a hot half hour for the home side’s chase.

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WICKET! Hazlewood c Ravindra b Henry 22 (Australia 383-10)

Hazlewood holes out! It was a faster ball from Henry and he chipped it to Ravindra at mid-off. That’s the innings done. Henry gets a hard-earned five-for and Cam Green walks off with a magnificent undefeated 174 not out. Handy knock from the Hoff too who stayed out there for 62 balls and 148 minutes to score 22 runs, break a record for the 10th wicket against New Zealand and shatter a few Kiwi hearts along the way.

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Australia break record for 10th wicket partnership against New Zealand!

That Cameron Green cover drive takes them to 115 past the 114 set by Jason Gillespie and Glenn McGrath at the Gabba in 2004.

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115th over: Australia 378-9 (Green 170, Hazlewood 22) O’Rourke floats a few past Green but surely he’s got to attack the stumps or the man here? There’s no pressure on the batters here. Only pain. And Green delivers another dose with a fantastic drive down the ground. That’s the record!

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114th over: Australia 378-9 (Green 170, Hazlewood 22) New Zealand delivered a middling first session on day one but redeemed it with late wickets. That hasn’t happened today. The breakthroughs haven’t come and Australia has controlled the tempo of the game. Green’s single from the final ball of Henry’s 30th over is just the second scoring shot in four overs, further proof that the baggy greeners are cantering.

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113th over: Australia 377-9 (Green 169, Hazlewood 22) Bowling speeds are falling with spirits here at Basin Reserve as the New Zealnd bowling attack flags in the shadows of lunch. The crowd, a healthy smattering across pavilions and grassy knolls, has been largely silenced by this stubborn last-wicket stand (now 110). Hazlewood plays out another maiden as Australia look for the safety of the long break.

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112th over: Australia 377-9 (Green 169, Hazlewood 22) A maiden. Yep, you read it right. A maiden. Cam and Josh must be hungry. They’ve shut up shop to eye off the buffet.

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111th over: Australia 377-9 (Green 169, Hazlewood 22) Hazlewood hits out! He cracks the New Zealand captain through covers to notch his fourth boundary and enter the roaring twenties. Meanwhile, Southee enters the nervous nineties with 0-92.

Rob Wilson is enjoying the show from Paris. “That pic at the top of the page (Cameron Green cleaving another six) is magically cheering on a horribly wet and wintry Parisian night. I’m also chuffed by the delightfully existential way that Green has mostly chugged along quite languidly with the last man in before giving it a bit of sporadic humpty. Somehow feels very Les Deux Magots in the 1950s. Sartre would have approved. Run rate is a hollow farce and the boundary rope is truly inside us all. Getting a double-ton is the ultimate gesture of despair.”

Thanks Rob! Given JP believed the underlying motivation for action is to be found in the nature of consciousness which is a desire for being, I think he’d be a Cam Green fan too.

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110th over: Australia 373-9 (Green 169, Hazlewood 18) Day one destroyer Matt Henry returns for a 28th over and straight away elicits AN EDGE from Green… but it falls short of the man at gully. More pain for the Black Caps. Australia’s run rate is 3.4 but it’s the ease with which the runs have come this morning that must be vexing the home side. They have been utterly untroubled by these so-called Kiwi Assassins.

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109th over: Australia 373-9 (Green 169, Hazlewood 18) Tough morning for Tim Southee. Doubtless he revved his team up to take this final wicket and get to 100 by lunch with the bat. Instead, he and his bowlers are still in the field and have been hammered to all parts of the ground and humiliated by a century-stand for the 10th wicket. His opening batters, primed to bat for nigh two hours now, must now be utterly frazzled.

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108th over: Australia 372-9 (Green 168, Hazlewood 18) Australia stroll through another over as Green takes a strolled single and Kuggeleijn delivers yet another wide bouncer.

Here’s a look at that extraordinary Gillespie-McGrath masterclass from 20 years back…

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107th over: Australia 370-9 (Green 167, Hazlewood 18) Green takes a single as these two close in on the record for the highest 10th wicket partnership against New Zealand, record held by Jason Gillespie and Glenn McGrath in the 2004 Test at Brisbane.

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106th over: Australia 368-9 (Green 166, Hazlewood 18) Kuggeleijn steams in for a 19th over. He has 2-67 and has the scalps of Marnus Labuschagne and Alex Carey but, like the rest of his teammates, he can’t prise out Cameron Green or Josh Hazlewood. New Zealand are missing Neil Wagner. He was the energy they called on in the past but, alas, the 260-wicket tyro is running drinks as a retiree today. He gets a good view from the sidelines as Green pulls another one behind square for SIX.

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105th over: Australia 362-9 (Green 160, Hazlewood 17) We’re now half an hour from lunch and Australia are in the extraordinary position of wondering whether to declare and have a lash at the Kiwis in a helter-skelter 20 minutes before the break. For Cummins to do so he’d have to deny Cam Smith a shot at a maiden double-century. The big fella sends a message to his skipper by adding another four to his tally with a neat clip to the fine leg boundary from the hapless Southee. How are New Zealand going to get this final wicket? This partnership is now worth 95!

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104th over: Australia 356-9 (Green 155, Hazlewood 16) Single off the first! Normally there’d be no reason for a screamer on that sentence but Green has forsaken singles early in the over to shield Hazlewood and farm the strike. Runs ensue anyway as new bowler Scott Kuggeleijn bounces one over both batter and keeper for four byes. Ouch! Personally, I think Josh deserves more credit than Green is giving him. He proves it by tonking Kuggeleijn down the ground for an easy run. That gets Green back on strike and he leans into the rigging and rides a straight ball from Kuggeleijn to the rope behind square. New Zealand have bowled 18 wides – a new (and unwanted) Test record.

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103rd over: Australia 345-9 (Green 150, Hazlewood 15) Ravindra whips through a maiden as Green basks in his magnificent century-and-a-half.

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102nd over: Australia 345-9 (Green 150, Hazlewood 15) That’s 150 for Cameron Green! And what a way to bring it up. He had clouted O’Rourke to the square leg boundary without breaching it and not running either. But he waited until the last to play what has become his trademark shoot in this innings – a step-back, high-elbow swipe over the square leg fence. This is becoming a career-defining innings for Cam Green.

Meanwhile, Nick Hebden has chimed in from Sydney to say what many of us are thinking: “I thought Australia might have been there for the taking at the end of a long summer and with changes in the batting order. (But) it feels like NZ have let them off the hook. The runs Green has made with the tail now put Australia in front. It will be interesting to see how the pitch holds up. The longer Aus bat, the more they keep NZ off the pitch when it will be at its best.”

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101st over: Australia 339-9 (Green 144, Hazlewood 15) Ravindra returns. The gloriously-tousled 24-year-old allrounder got the lbw wicket of Pat Cummins yesterday, a just reward for some energetic bowling in front of his home crowd. He leaks a single to Green and is otherwise tidy but there’s no teeth in this New Zealand attack.

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100th over: Australia 338-9 (Green 143, Hazlewood 15) O’Rourke brings up triple figures for New Zealand, bowling the 100th over to a dangerously composed Cameron Green who has led this 70-run partnership, now the highest of the innings. After some stick in his opening overs, O’Rourke has got his radar right now. Green still drives a single down the ground to retain strike to Ravindra.

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99th over: Australia 337-9 (Green 142, Hazlewood 15) Bowling change. It’ll be Rachin Ravindra to bowl his fifth over. Bit desperate but worth a try at this stage, I guess. Green doesn’t mind it either. He hammers the fourth ball to the boundary at deep midwicket – that’s his 20th four of the innings.

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As we pause for refreshments, Rowan Sweeney blows the froth off a salient point:
”The support that Green’s got from the lower order, even before this morning’s fireworks, does nothing to quiet my chuntering that Alex Carey should go further down the order. He’s not bad with the willow, but doesn’t seem as inclined to stick around to support the higher order batters. He’s absolutely our best gloveman so he has to bad somewhere, but I think he should be below Starc, and possibly Cummins.”

Yes, he’s a mercurial man is Carey. A fine gloveman first and foremost and a marvellous strokeplayer on his day too but a real rocks or diamonds proposition lately. Perhaps he’s feeling pressure from the incumbent Josh Inglis or a hangover from the dramas of the Ashes series last6tv year? I’d keep him where he is. Anyone else got an opinion?

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98th over: Australia 332-9 (Green 138, Hazlewood 15) Hazlewood plays out a maiden from Henry. He’s looking solid as a rock this morning. This resolute 15 is the Hoff’s highest Test score since January 2019. According to Cricinfo he’d gone 27 innings without making more than 11 (but was not out in 16 of them). Onya Josh! That deserves a drink (onfield only, alas).

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97th over: Australia 332-9 (Green 138, Hazlewood 15) Southee persists with O’Rourke. The youngster is into his 23rd over but has copped a shellacking this morning. Green spurns a couple of singles to wait for a loose one to heave into the heavens. But it doesn’t arrive and O’Rourke delivers a rare maiden to expose Hazlewood to the strike.

Simon McMahon has dropped in to see what condition our condition is in. “Hi Angus. This last wicket partnership is now very much into the ‘annoying’ category for New Zealand. Could even end up being the highest of the innings. That’s probably happened more often than I imagine, but it would still be pretty cool.” Not if you’re a Kiwi, Simon.

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96th over: Australia 332-9 (Green 138, Hazlewood 15) Josh Hazlewood’s feisty 15 runs this morning gives him the highest score for an Australian in a Test match in Wellington, surpassing Glenn McGrath’s memorable 14 in 2004-05. Green sends congratulations with a nicely worked boundary, chipping it off the hip to the fine leg rope. The next boundary is brute power as he swipes Henry to the fence for four. Lots of wincing and stone-kicking by the Kiwis as this partnership hits 60 and the total surges toward 350.

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95th over: Australia 323-9 (Green 129, Hazlewood 15) Hazlewood gets into the action! He greets Will O’Rourke’s first ball with an angled bat and clean energy to send it skidding to the rope at backward square. Lovely shot! That’s the fifty partnership for these two. O’Rourke’s response is a wild bouncer wide down legside. Hazlewood’s riposte to that whanger is SUPERB – a glorious cover drive down the ground for another boundary.

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94th over: Australia 314-9 (Green 129, Hazlewood 7) The Green-Hazlewood partnership is into the forties now, an equally valuable forty to that scored by Mitch Marsh yesterday. That counter-attacking carvery of heaves and hoiks altered the momentum of this innings, took Australia from deep trouble to superiority and, most importantly, inspired Cameron Green to break the shackles and playb his shots. He plays one of them to Matt Henry’s fifth ball but air swings magnificently. Gets it right on the next, sending it over the fence and scattering the punters on the Basin Reserve Hill. Maximum!

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93rd over: Australia 308-9 (Green 123, Hazlewood 7) Clearly frustrated by this late-order resistance, New Zealand captain Tim Southee has removed himself from the attack and thrown the ball to William O’Rourke, the English-born 22-year-old in his second Test. O’Rourke bowled beautifully yesterday for his 2-59. But Hazlewood works him for a single through short leg from the first delivery and gives Green a good look. And BANG! goes Green stepping away to leg and clobbering him down the ground for SIX. That’s his highest score in Tests. Green tries to replicate the shot but it’s a faster ball and follows him down leg side so he manages a clouted single onto the offside instead.

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92nd over: Australia 300-9 (Green 116, Hazlewood 6) Again Green spurns a single from Henry to retain strike. The 32-year-old Christchucher pings in a stern reprimand on the next, squaring Green up with a quicker ball that threads the needle between bat and pad. Josh Hazlewood visibly licked his lips at the movement and threat in that delivery. Now it’s Green licking his lips. He steps back to a Henry bouncer aimed at his throat and heaves it over the rope behind square for SIX to take the total over 300.

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91st over: Australia 294-9 (Green 110, Hazlewood 6) Overcast skies today in Wellington but Southee can’t yet find any movement in the murk. There’s still plenty of bounce in this pitch and Green paddles a cut shot for a single from the fourth. Curious tactics from the Australians this morning. You’d think they’d be swinging lustily for fast runs to expose the New Zealand top-order early in the day. Scratch that, reverse it as Hazlewood plays a cross-bat swat down the ground for four. Nice shot from The Hoff!

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90th over: Australia 287-9 (Green 109, Hazlewood 2) Bouncer from Henry! Actually no, given Green stands two-metres tall and it whistled past the bum fluff on his chin, it’s a regulation ball. Green remains unruffled. He steps down to the next, a tactic that served him well yesterday when he was able to muddle the bowlers’ lengths. Henry’s fifth is a bouncer that sails over the batter’s head. It’s so high it’s a wide. Another bouncer on the last and Green has a red-hot go at this one, catching a top edged single to third man.

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89th over: Australia 286-9 (Green 108, Hazlewood 2) The umpires were so freaked by that likely two that became a no-run score they had to confer to make sure no runs were scored. Tim Southee’s okay with the result. He has Green on strike under overcast skies and no wickets against his name. He bounces the big allrounder on the fourth, no mean feat given the 24-year-old stands 200cm. He puts the next ball outside off at higher speed and Green inside edges it for a single after a handy stop by wicketkeeper Blundell saves the boundary. Just one run from the over but Green keeps the strike.

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88th over: Australia 285-9 (Green 107, Hazlewood 2) Henry to Hazlewood. Although he bats No 11, the Bendemeer Bullet isn’t bad with the bat. He averages 11 and has a highest score of 39. He’s playing circumspectly this morning, setting himself for a big innings perhaps. Maybe he wants a good look at this pitch before he starts bowling on it later today. He eases Henry’s fifth ball past gully for two and then strokes the last through covers. But, in a bizarre moment, the batters stop halfway down the pitch and then return to their marks realising it was only a single and Green would evade strike. Weird!

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87th over: Australia 283-9 (Green 107, Hazlewood 0) Southee’s figures (0-68) don’t show it but he bowled pretty well yesterday. He copped some welly from Mitch Marsh in that whirlwind 40 and some late stick from Green as he accelerated to three figures. And he’s on target today to Green. The fourth ball rears off a length and hits Green on the point of the left hip, buckling the big man for a moment. He exacts revenge on the next ball, taking a giant stride to the leg side and thwacking it to the boundary.

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86th over: Australia 279-9 (Green 103, Hazlewood 0) And we’re away! Matt Henry, the day one star for New Zealand with 4-43, zings in a fast-medium yorker first up but Hazlewood digs it out nicely and sees out the over. Will Green pick up where he left off and open the shoulders in pursuit of 300? Tim Southee is about to find out…

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We’re taking a look at the day two wicket. It’s a paler shade of eucalyptus green with a few cracks opening up, which bodes well for Australia’s pace bowling cartel and ominously for the home side’s formidable batting line up, although Kane Williamson is in the form of his life with four consecutive centuries and could probably score tons anywhere.

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Although the Black Caps have become one of the most admired teams in world cricket, their recent record against Australia is fairly dire. They have just one win over Australia since 1993! And yet for children of the 1980s, their superiority over Allan Border’s woebegone side is a wound still salty. It’s been 39 years but this 1985 defeat lingers long in the memory, not only for the pain of the innings defeat but also for the first Test century by another allrounder Greg Matthews, one of the game’s truly original characters and an underrated cricketer in a tough era for the boys in the baggy green.

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This series marks the first time since 2016 that Australia’s Test side has toured New Zealand. Given the Wallabies invite the All Blacks over the ditch for a trouncing EVERY. SINGLE. YEAR it’s a tad inhospitable of the Kiwis. Maybe Tanya Aldred has the answers as to why these brothers in arms and best of frenemies have been on ice for so long…

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For those who came in late… here’s how day one played out.

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Preamble

Greetings cricket fans and welcome to Wellington for day two of the first Test pitting Australia against New Zealand for the Trans-Tasman trophy

Day one was a beaut, with both teams enjoying periods of superiority. New Zealand won the toss and sent the visitors in but Steve Smith and Usman Khawaja were able to combat the Basin Reserve’s tricky green-top pitch and eke their way to 60 without loss.

But the loss of Smith for 31 just before lunch triggered a collapse and after the break, Tim Southee’s Black Caps tore into the Australian top order. At one stage Australia lost four 28 in 17 overs, with the wretched recent runs of No 3 Marnus Labuschagne and No 5 Travis Head continuing, both dismissed for one. Matt Henry was the chief destroyer and the inswinger that cracked Khawaja’s middle stump was one for the ages.

It took the two allrounders from West Australia to arrest the slide. With the halo of his Allan Border medal still glowing, Mitch Marsh strode out amidst the tumult, thundered his first ball to the boundary and started the Australian counter-attack. At the other end No 4 Cameron Green had hung tough and survived. But when Marsh departed for 40, the young man took charge, upping the ante and shepherding the tail beyond 200.

Green’s innings was superb. After plodding to tea, he accelerated in the final session, eventually notching his second Test century from the final over of the day and stealing the ascendency from the home side. He resumes today on 103 and Australia nine for 279.

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