New Zealand fight back after Australia attack stalls

BRISBANE, (Reuters) – Daniel Vettori helped steady New  Zealand’s innings at 176-5 after Australia’s inexperienced  bowling attack had earlier threatened to skittle the tourists on  the rain-curtailed opening day of the first test yesterday.

Injury-hit Australia handed debuts to pacemen Mitchell Starc  and James Pattinson as well as opening batsman David Warner and  all three played integral roles as the hosts reduced New Zealand  to 96-5 in the first over after lunch.

Former captain Vettori, one of test cricket’s most prolific  tailend batsmen, launched a fightback with a battling 45 in an  unbeaten partnership of 80 with Dean Brownlie (32) to rescue the  innings before bad weather halted play just before tea.

Daniel Vettori

The Blacks Caps, who had come into the match confident they  could end their 26-year wait for a test win in Australia, won  the toss and elected to bat, with opener Brendon McCullum taking  the game to the hosts in typically aggressive fashion.

The 30-year-old hammered 12 runs off Pattinson’s first over  to give the quick a rude welcome to test cricket and drove his  side to 44 without loss before his partner Martin Guptill was  caught behind off the bowling of Peter Siddle for 13.

Starc, who finished with 2-52, grabbed the first of his two  wickets on the final ball of his fifth over to remove McCullum  for 34, tempting the former wicketkeeper into an attempted cut  which left Warner with an easy catch at point.
Finger spinner Nathan Lyon, playing his first match at the  Gabba in his sixth test, got his reward for a fine spell 20  minutes before lunch when Kane Williamson popped the ball to  close fielder Usman Khawaja for 19.

Pattinson, who gave up 50 runs in his 11 overs, rounded out  a good morning for Australia when Taylor swung at a full  delivery and edged the ball onto his stumps for 14 just before  lunch.

Six balls into the afternoon session, left-armer Starc  benefited from another loose stroke from a New Zealander to  dispatch Jesse Ryder with Warner again taking the catch, this  time at gully.

“It’s a day I’ll never forget,” Starc, 21, told reporters.  “Just to get that baggy green’s a pretty proud moment and then  to get a couple of wickets is just fantastic.

Mitchell Starc

“(I was) a little bit inconsistent but pretty happy with the  way it went in the end.”
Ryder’s turned out to be the last wicket to fall for the  day, although Brownlie rode his luck with Australia skipper  Michael Clarke spilling a straightforward chance at slip and  Warner missing a more difficult catching opportunity in the next  over.

The final four days of the first of two tests between the  trans-Tasman rivals will start half an hour earlier at 9.30 am  local time (2330 GMT) in an attempt to make up for the lost  session.

Scoreboard

New Zealand first innings
B. McCullum c Warner b Starc                                         34
M. Guptill c Haddin b Siddle                                              13
K. Williamson c Khawaja b Lyon                                      19
R. Taylor b Pattinson                                                            14
J. Ryder c Warner b Starc                                                     6
D. Brownlie not out                                                               32
D. Vettori not out                                                                  45
Extras (b-9, w-3, nb-1)                                                         13
Total (for five wickets, 51 overs)                                      176     
 Fall of wickets: 1-44 2-56 3-78 4-93 5-96
 Still to bat: R. Young, D. Bracewell, T. Southee, C. Martin.
 Bowling (to date): Pattinson 11-1-50-1 (nb-1, w-2), Siddle  15-5-29-1 (w-1), Starc 13-0-52-2, Lyon 10-0-31-1, Hussey  2-0-5-0.
 Australia: P. Hughes, D. Warner, U. Khawaja, R. Ponting, M.  Clarke, M. Hussey, B. Haddin, P. Siddle, J. Pattinson, M. Starc,  N. Lyon.