Pakistan rue missed chances as New Zealand take lead

Williamson hits first international century for almost two years

By AP

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New Zealand's Kane Williamson (right) leaves the ball during the third day of the first Test at the National Stadium in Karachi. — AFP
New Zealand's Kane Williamson (right) leaves the ball during the third day of the first Test at the National Stadium in Karachi. — AFP

Published: Wed 28 Dec 2022, 8:03 PM

Kane Williamson's first international century for almost two years put New Zealand on top in the first Test against Pakistan on Wednesday.

Williamson, who stepped down from the captaincy in his team's first Test tour to Pakistan in 20 years, capitalised on two missed stumpings off Nauman Ali to hit an unbeaten 105 as the Black Caps reached 440-6 at stumps on the third day, a lead of two runs.


Tom Latham also made his 13th Test century, becoming the first New Zealand opener to achieve the feat, and Devon Conway hit 92 as the visitors dominated the spinners on a slow turning wicket.

Mystery spinner Abrar Ahmed picked up 3-143 and left-arm slow bowler Nauman took 2-137 but neither could wrestle control away from the batters.


“It has started to take turn from the (bowlers') footmarks and it’s obviously not going to get any easier to bat on," Latham said after spending four hours and 10 minutes at the crease.

“Hopefully from the position we are in, we get as many wickets as possible and put Pakistan under pressure.”

Wicketkeeper Sarfaraz Ahmed, making a Test comeback after four years, fumbled stumping opportunities when Williamson was on 15 and 21, while the former skipper also overturned an lbw ruling against Abrar through a television referral.

Williamson raised his first international century since his 238 against Pakistan in Hamilton in January 2021 when he drove Mohammad Wasim to extra cover for a single.

“We got chances,” Nauman said. “Sarfaraz did his best but the ball was full on the leg side and it was difficult for him.”

Tom Blundell (47) and Daryl Mitchell (42) played useful knocks and shared half-century stands with Williamson against some scrappy Pakistan fielding. Blundell was dropped low down by Imam-ul-Haq at short mid-wicket before paceman Wasim had him lbw late in the day.

Mitchell, who scored three centuries and two half-centuries in the three-Test series against England in June, smashed four successive boundaries off Wasim after Pakistan took the second new ball.

Abrar removed Mitchell and Latham to reverse sweeps as the ball ballooned to close-in fielders after hitting their gloves.

Captain Babar Azam was among at least three Pakistan players hit by a virus and didn’t take the field at the start. He stayed off until half an hour after lunch.

Salman Agha, who made a maiden Test hundred in Pakistan’s first innings 438, is unwell and hasn’t fielded.

There was confusion when substitute fielder Mohammad Rizwan led the team for a while. However, team management had named Sarfaraz as the designated stand-in skipper and he eventually took charge because substitute fielders can’t captain a side.

Resuming on 165-0, Latham and Conway stretched their opening stand to a record 183 before Nauman struck in his first over.

Conway had added 10 to his overnight 82 but was out lbw to a Nauman delivery which spun sharply from the rough. Sarfaraz successfully overturned umpire Aleem Dar’s not-out decision through a television referral.

The opening stand bettered New Zealand’s previous first-wicket record against Pakistan when Mark Richardson and Matthew Bell shared a 181-run partnership in Hamilton in 2001.

New Zealand are on their first Test tour to Pakistan since 2002 and Karachi will also host the second match next week after Multan was ruled out because of weather concerns. The two-Test series will be followed by three ODIs, also in Karachi.

Brief scores:

Pakistan first innings 438 all out. New Zealand first innings 440/6 at stumps on Day Three (Tom Latham 113, Kane Williamson 105 not out, Devon Conway 92, Tom Blundell 47, Daryl Mitchell 42; Abrar Ahmed 3-143, Nauman Ali 2-137)

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