Black Caps need miracle as Australia close in on big win
BY JONATHAN MILLMOW
A double breakthrough by Australian paceman Doug Bollinger reversed a promising New Zealand start on the third day of the first cricket Test.

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New Zealand coach Mark Greatbatch once saved a test against Australia by batting for 11 hours with the tail, but don't expect any cricketing miracles of the sort today.
Judging by New Zealand's batting over the weekend, they will be flushed away before lunch on the fourth day, an unacceptable outcome on a terrific Basin Reserve pitch.
They trail by 115 runs with five wickets in hand, their hopes of restoring some credibility resting on the shoulders of Daniel Vettori and Brendon McCullum because, of the bowlers that follow, only Tuffey can hold a bat.
New Zealand have been undone by the bounce of Doug Bollinger, with many of the wickets falling to steep, bouncing deliveries that need not have been played at.
"We are disappointed in ourselves," Greatbatch said.
"Aussie have worked hard, they've hit the deck hard but Mac [Tim McIntosh] showed the courage and attitude to succeed at this level, but we need two or three in an innings to do that."
New Zealand lost 11 wickets yesterday, the most parlous that of Tuffey, who was run out in the first innings through not sliding his bat.
But Martin Guptill will be embarrassed at being caught at short cover for the third time in a fortnight, and Ross Taylor will be unhappy at not playing a shot to a ball from Nathan Hauritz that turned sharply out of the rough.
"That [Tuffey] is schoolboy stuff really, and he's disappointed and he'll probably learn from it because you don't tend to do those things more than once," Greatbatch said.
If a high point can be found, it was the batting of McIntosh. An ugly duckling, he scrapped for four hours then showed an expansive side late in the final session. He moved to 83 before the no-ball-riddled Hauritz secured an inside edge and Simon Katich pulled off a corker of a catch at short leg.
"It would be nice to see him keep going," Greatbatch said. "He batted nearly five hours [276 minutes] – if two or three other guys did that we'd still be well in the test match.
"He has great focus, he learns quick and battled hard against a bloody good attack."
Twenty-one years ago in Perth, Greatbatch earned himself cult status when he batted New Zealand to a draw with a knock of 146 not out in 655 minutes.
Little wonder, then, that he refuses to give up the ghost.
"There are two days left and funny things happen in cricket," Greatbatch said.
"It is little targets in this position. You have to achieve small targets and hope that builds into something big."
Everyone knows it is a wing and a prayer and, to make matters worse, Vettori is a bad starter and McCullum is suited to pursuing success rather than denying it.
Greatbatch said McCullum would be left to his own devices today.
"Brendon is an instinctive player. You have to give him that rein and hope he makes good decisions with that instinctive nature."
On the other side of the table is a hard-working pack of Australian pace bowlers that will be buoyed by the second new ball just eight overs away.
Bollinger, Ryan Harris and Mitchell Johnson bowl with heat and seldom stray, and now Hauritz has parked up at one end and is coming into play. He bowled 22 overs unchanged and has the wickets of Taylor and McIntosh to show for it.
Bollinger has match figures of 7-58 from 26 overs and one senses the 28-year-old New South Wales left-armer is not done yet.
- © Fairfax NZ News
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You sir are a sad individual. Most of us and the Aussies I suspect have moved from that incident that happened decades ago. You however seem to still be hung up about it therefore proving the points I made in my previous comment. Good grief man, get a grip !!!
I rest my case!!! Aussie cheat yet agin. This is just as bad as the underarm incedent
In response to comment #2 by "vettori for PM" one must consider if this is merely a typical kiwi 'sour grapes' attitude? Take a look at the facts whinger, in the T20 we proved that we are inconsistent in being thrashed in the first one and scraping home in the second one. Then in the ODI's we proved again to be inconsistent in that we somehow managed to win a match on either side of the series yet screw up the 3 important ones in the middle and therefore lose the series. All this makes us "as good if not better" than Australia? Take a reality check buddy and try to smell what you're shoveling here. Do the Aussies whinge and moan and complain like this when they are outclassed? No they just get on with the job in the next series and improve, hence the reason they are dominating us here. Mate, this attitude you are displaying here which unfortunately seems to be shared by many New Zealanders who are suffering 'small dog' syndrome almost makes me ashamed to call myself kiwi.
We'll be saved by the rain. Another victory to NZ! Roll on the IPL. Should be fit by then, by some stange coincidence.
our best player is the rain. go the rain! rain for pm!
Can someone please tell me it the Blackcaps were even trying to win this game, it looked like they were out for the draw from the start and then on day three realised they couldnt even manage that and gave up entirely.
You gotta feel for Dan. He must hate playing test cricket against oz when your bowlers/ batters switch off between 20 and 50 overs. Mind you, Im sure oz are loving it cause they need this tour for the ashes series so their out of form players can get some time out in middle.
Yeah some very poor batting technique. Guptill stands with his feet too far apart and is off balance, and Ingram’s technique looks woefully inadequate for this level. But what poor team selection - is Vettori really a test number 6? I guess he is when our other bowlers aren’t capable of 15 runs between them. The fact that Ponting enforced the follow on shows you what he thinks of NZ’s batting.
Lord only knows why I'm still following the Black Caps. Where on earth have the inform batsmen in the country gone to? Madagascar? Where is Kane Williamson? Where is Sinclair? Where is Diamante? Why do we bother with Ingram in the longer form of the game? I realise that Australia are the inform test team in the world but we just plain suck. We could do with vanishing from the test scene for a good two years to see the lads focus on their so called abilities..!
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Should Kane Williamson be preserved for test cricket only?
NZ could get out of this easy. Why doesn't someone in the NZ team just hide the wickets or something. OK I know they could go down to the Warehouse and buy some more but you could ask all the Warehouse's in Wellington to close for the day, or take all the wickets of the shelves.
Remember cricket is a thinking man's game