1st Test, England tour of New Zealand at Christchurch, Jan 18-22 1992
Scorecard and Video Highlights
Toss: New Zealand
Throughout the game the only question was whether England would have the
time to win or not; they were on top from the first hour. Although the
pitch was then damp enough to help the pace bowlers for the one time in
the match, Morrison and Cairns were too wayward as they strained for an
opening. Thereafter the pitch was plain slow, and being bound together
by grass which was hardly scarred in the course of five days, encouraged
spin only little, even Tufnell's. Plenty of rolling by the groundsman,
Russell Wylie, and his removal of rubbishy top soil, had produced a
benign clay-based strip far from the result wicket which England had
seen on their two previous Test tours.
Stewart, in his highest and most controlled Test innings to that point,
counteracted the early fall of Gooch and the uncertainty of Hick. The
vice-captain reached 50 by lunch and 102 by tea, and it needed a ball
which bounced abnormally to have him caught at first slip in the final
over of the opening day. Stewart's cutting, cover-driving and pulling
fully punished the regular bad balls; but it was his compactness, in not
playing loose off-side shots early on, which was most impressive. So,
it was an expensive mistake when Crowe, the sole slip, dropped Smith on
44. England's third-wicket pair had added 179 in 50 overs and the bat
was completely in command by the time Smith repeated his back-foot drive
and edged to the new first slip, Greatbatch. Stewart hit 17 fours,
Smith 16, Lamb and Lewis 13 each (with a six for Lamb), as New Zealand
lacked not only Hadlee but a medium-pacer to keep one end tight.
If England's run-scoring was slightly more leisurely on the second day,
as Lamb sought a century on his return to the side and Reeve played his
début innings, it was still thoroughly efficient. Such was their
confidence that Defreitas, having blocked his first ball of the tour,
drove the second over long-on for six. This was England's highest total
at Christchurch, surpassing their 560 for eight in 1932-33. Poor weather
limited New Zealand's reply to 2.2 overs on the second evening and
allowed no play at all on the third morning. The prospect of a result
receded further as Hartland defended calmly on his Test début. But then
Tufnell had the first of his two inspired spells in the match, using the
wind off the Cashmere Hills to drift the ball into the right-hander and
taking four top-order wickets for 20. Wright, lured at last into
driving, edged to slip, Hartland gave Smith the first of four close-in
catches off pad and bat; and Thomson completely misread a ball drifting
into him. Yet the game changed abruptly again when Patel
counter-attacked against Tufnell, who had been similarly hammered by the
same player on his first-class début for Middlesex in 1986.
Patel and Cairns carried on aggressively on the fourth morning to a new
seventh-wicket record for New Zealand against England, of 117 in 120
minutes. But just as the follow-on target of 381 was coming within
range, Patel went for a third run to Pringle, running back towards
long-on, and missed out on his maiden Test century by a yard. It was the
ninth instance of a Test batsman run out for 99, all post-war. Reeve
chipped in by taking a wicket with his eighth ball in Test cricket, and
New Zealand were batting again before tea on the fourth day. Thereafter
it was hard work for an increasingly footsore England. Only one wicket
fell before the close, another - the nightwatchman - on the last
morning, and a third in the afternoon session, as New Zealand defended
with great defiance. After tea England still had to take more wickets -
seven - than had fallen on any of the previous days. Reeve was off the
field with a stomach upset by food poisoning, Defreitas limped off
before the close, and the pitch had barely worn at all. But Tufnell had
rediscovered his length and flight.
Wright, tied down on 99 for 23 minutes either side of the tea interval,
became ever more fretful at Tufnell's accuracy and for the first time in
more than six hours went down the pitch to try and hit him over the
top, The second time he charged, he was stranded by a wider ball
bouncing out of the footmarks. In Tufnell's next over but one Greatbatch
and Thomson were out. When Patel, torn between defending and attacking,
skied to mid-off, 65 minutes remained. After Lewis had bounced out Ian
Smith, the last pair were left with half an hour to survive and 18 runs
to make. They knocked off 14 of them, until Crowe gambled all against a
field brought in to save every run, and lost.It was the third
consecutive Test in which Tufnell had taken five wickets in an innings,
and his figures of 85.1 overs and 11 wickets for 147 runs were the fruit
of flighted bowling of rare, old-fashioned craft.
Man of the Match: P. C. R. Tufnell.
Close of play: First day, England 310-A ( A. J. Lamb 17*, R. C.
Russell 0*); Second day, New Zealand 3-0 ( B. R. Hartland 0*, J. G.
Wright 2*); Third day, New Zealand 169-6 ( D. N. Patel 55*, C. L. Cairns
3*); Fourth day, New Zealand 81-1 ( J. G. Wright 28*, D. K. Morrison
0*).
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