Wagner rocks Zimbabwe as NZ take charge

Published July 29, 2016
Bulawayo: New Zealand captain Kane Williamson (R) joins Henry Nicholls (L) in an appeal during the first Test against Zimbabwe at the Queens Sports Club on Thursday.—AFP
Bulawayo: New Zealand captain Kane Williamson (R) joins Henry Nicholls (L) in an appeal during the first Test against Zimbabwe at the Queens Sports Club on Thursday.—AFP

BULAWAYO: Left-arm seamer Neil Wagner’s raw pace and aggression proved too much for an out-of-touch Zimbabwean batting line-up as New Zealand stamped their authority on the first Test on the opening day at Queens Sports Club.

On a surface offering little to the bowlers, Wagner bent his back and used the short ball to good effect to take career-best figures of six for 41, bowling Zimbabwe out for just 164 after they had won the toss and elected to bat first.

New Zealand closed the day on 32 without loss, with Tom Latham on 16 and Martin Guptill on 14.

Zimbabwe had not played a Test since November 2014, and the hiatus showed in their inability to occupy the crease on a pitch that held no demons.

Opener Brian Chari fell to the second ball of the day, and after Chamu Chibhabha and Hamilton Masakadza offered some stability with an hour-long stand, Wagner got stuck into the hosts.

In a 13-over spell either side of the lunch break, the 30-year-old removed Chibhabha and Sean Williams before the interval and then struck three times in one over to reduce the hosts to 72 for eight.

Debutant Prince Masvaure and tailender Donald Tiripano did their best to haul the home side towards some sort of respectability, batting nearly three hours in an 85-run stand for the ninth wicket.

Proving that the top order had no excuses for their frailty, Tiripano registered the highest score by a Zimbabwean No. 10.

“It was more about gutsing it out out there,” he said. “The guys didn’t apply themselves as much as they should have. It’s something they need to work on.”

Tim Southee eventually made the breakthrough when he trapped Masvaure lbw for 42, before Wagner wrapped up the innings to leave Tiripano unbeaten on 49.

Guptill and Latham had no trouble in seeing out the 10 overs left in the day as they reduced New Zealand’s deficit to 132.

Scoreboard

ZIMBABWE (1st Innings):

B.B. Chari c Guptill b Southee4 C.J. Chibhabha c Latham b Wagner15 H. Masakadza c and b Santner15 C.R. Ervine st Watling b Santner13 S.C. Williams c Sodhi b Wagner1 Sikandar Raza c Latham b Wagner22 P.S. Masvaure lbw b Southee42 R.W. Chakabva c Watling b Wagner0 A.G. Cremer c Nicholls b Wagner0 D.T. Tiripano not out49 M.T. Chinouya b Wagner1

EXTRAS (LB-2)2

TOTAL (all out, 77.5 overs)164

FALL OF WKTS: 1-4, 2-35, 3-35, 4-36, 5-72, 6-72, 7-72, 8-72, 9-157.

BOWLING: Southee 17-8-28-2; Boult 11-5-23-0; Santner 14-5-16-2; Wagner 20.5-8-41-6; Sodhi 15-3-54-0.

NEW ZEALAND (1st Innings):

M.J. Guptill not out14 T.W.M. Latham not out16

EXTRAS (NB-2)2

TOTAL (for no wkt, 10 overs)32

TO BAT: K.S. Williamson, L.R.P.L. Taylor, H.M. Nicholls, M.J. Santner, B.J. Watling, I.S. Sodhi, T.G. Southee, N. Wagner, T.A. Boult.

BOWLING (to-date): Chinouya 4-0-10-0; Tiripano 3-0-13-0 (1nb); Masvaure 1-0-2-0 (1nb); Cremer 1-0-1-0; Sikandar Raza 1-0-6-0.

UMPIRES: M.A. Gough (England) and P.R. Reiffel (Australia).

TV UMPIRE: L. Rusere (Zimbabwe).

MATCH REFEREE: D.C. Boon (Australia).

Published in Dawn, July 29th, 2016

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