NZ vs AUS, 1st Test - Day 3: New Zealand needs 258 to win first Test against Australia

New Zealand’s highest successful fourth-innings run chase was the 324 it scored against Pakistan at Christchurch in 1994. Its highest at Basin Reserve was the 285 it scored to beat Sri Lanka last year.

Published : Mar 02, 2024 11:48 IST - 2 MINS READ

New Zealand’s Glenn Phillips holds the ball up as he walks from the field after taking five wickets on day three.
New Zealand’s Glenn Phillips holds the ball up as he walks from the field after taking five wickets on day three. | Photo Credit: AP
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New Zealand’s Glenn Phillips holds the ball up as he walks from the field after taking five wickets on day three. | Photo Credit: AP

New Zealand was 111 for three at the close of play on the third day of the first Test against Australia at Wellington’s Basin Reserve on Saturday, still 258 runs away from its daunting victory target of 369.

Spinner Glenn Phillips had taken five for 45 - his first five-wicket haul in First-Class cricket - as New Zealand took Australia’s last six wickets for the addition of 37 runs to end the tourist’s second innings on 164.

The batting was no easier for the Black Caps, however. Openers Tom Latham and Will Young both departed cheaply, while mainstay Kane Williamson had scored only nine runs when he was dismissed by spinner Nathan Lyon.

Rachin Ravindra, who reached the half-century mark for the second time in his short Test career and was 56 not out at Stumps, will resume on day four alongside Daryl Mitchell, who was unbeaten on 12, in a partnership worth 52 runs.

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New Zealand’s highest successful fourth-innings run-chase was the 324 it scored against Pakistan at Christchurch in 1994. Its highest at Basin Reserve was the 285 it scored to beat Sri Lanka last year.

Australia will be looking to off-spinner Lyon to play a key role in putting the tourist 1-0 up in the two-match series that concludes with the second Test in Christchurch starting on Friday.

As nightwatchman, Lyon had punished New Zealand for dropping him off the final ball of day two by hitting a bright 41 to push Australia from 13 for two at the start of the day to 53 for three when he was caught at square-leg off Matt Henry.

Opener Usman Khawaja also departed before Lunch for 28 to give Phillips his first wicket off a stumping, but Australia would have been happy at reaching the break on 113 for four with its lead already past the 300 mark.

Phillips took charge in the second session by sending back Travis Head (29) and Mitchell Marsh off successive balls before returning to dismiss Alex Carey cheaply and then finally snaring Cameron Green for 34.

Green’s 174 in a rearguard action in the first innings was largely responsible for Australia’s lead, but there was to be no tailend heroics in the second as Henry (3-36) stepped up to take the last two wickets. 

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