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Washington Sundar ran through New Zealand batting order to finish with excellent bowling figures of 7/59 in Pune.
India’s three changes for the 2nd Test against New Zealand became the talking point after the toss in Pune in the morning but by the time the stumps were drawn, Washington Sundar had done justice to his selection over Kuldeep Yadav with a career-best 7/59. His maiden five-wicket haul in Test cricket helped India bowl out New Zealand for 259 in 79.1 overs at the Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium.
However, India received an early jolt in their reply when Tim Southee cleaned up captain Rohit Sharma for a nine-ball duck before they ended the day with 16/1 in 11 overs. India decided against sending a nightwatchman with Shubman Gill (10*) and Yashasvi Jaiswal (6*) finishing the day unbeaten, trailing by New Zealand by 243 runs in the first innings.
Also Read: IND vs NZ 2nd Test Day 1 Highlights
Rohit, who was cleaned up for the third time in the series and for the second time by Southee, was squared up as he looked to defend in the line of the delivery but the ball moved away to beat his outside edge and crash into the off-stump.
Southee thus became the first among fast bowlers to take a wicket in this Test after a dominating show by the Indian spin duo of Sundar and R Ashwin (3/64), who did not allow New Zealand to break free.
The 25-year-old Sundar, playing his first Test for India since March, 2021, ran through New Zealand after Ashwin claimed the first three wickets in the innings to move past his Australian peer Nathan Lyon in the list of highest wicket-takers in Tests.
Ashwin began by trapping New Zealand captain Tom Latham (15) in front of the wickets and getting Will Young (18) caught behind in the first session, while Sundar took the centrestage towards the end of the second.
While he was measly to begin with as New Zealand batters looked to consolidate, Sundar reaped rich dividends for his perseverance.
He swung the momentum in India’s favour with two late wickets in the second session, including the in-form Rachin Ravindra, as New Zealand stumbled to 201/5 at tea.
Ravindra’s dismissal close to the tea break proved instrumental as New Zealand could never recover from the blow and folded in the final session without much resistance.
The young batter looked primed for another big knock but Sundar’s brilliance stopped him in his tracks.
Of his seven dismissals in an outstanding spell on a day one wicket, Sundar showed mastery in hitting the off-stump to snare five of his victims bowled, one pinned in front of the wickets while the other caught by fellow tweaker Ashwin.
Among those who were cleaned up by the Indian spinner were Ravindra, Tom Blundell (3), Mitchell Santner (33), Tim Southee (5) and Ajaz Patel (4).
The highlight, however, was the manner in which he cleaned up the in-form Ravindra, who looked good after his efforts of 134 and 39 not out in New Zealand’s eight-wicket win in the opening Test.
Sundar pitched the ball just perfectly to have it spinning away from Ravindra’s bat and crash into the off-stump, beating the in-form batter fair and square who had otherwise struck a perfect balance in attack and defence.
At the top, Conway managed 76 from 141 balls with 11 fours but he was among Ashwin’s three wickets at the top.
The Kiwis’ opener used his reverse sweeps against the spinners and drives down the wicket against the Indian pacers to good effect to accumulate his runs, but he had only himself to blame for missing out on scoring a century again.
On an innocuous delivery outside off, Conway went for a stroke but got an edge to be caught behind off Ashwin.
New Zealand’s woes compounded when off-colour batters in skipper Latham and Mitchell continued to struggle for runs despite spending considerable time in the middle.
With PTI Inputs