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Nathan Lyon (centre) of Australia celebrates the wicket of New Zealand’s BJ Watling with teammates during day four of the first Test at Basin Reserve in Wellington yesterday. Image Credit: AFP

Wellington: Australia’s aim of regaining the top ranking in Test cricket has taken a major step forward following Monday’s comprehensive victory over New Zealand in the opener of their two-match series, according to captain Steve Smith.

Australia thumped the hosts by an innings and 52 runs at the Basin Reserve shortly after lunch on the fourth day to put themselves in prime position to usurp India at the head of the ICC test rankings.

The triumph means Smith’s side can afford to draw the second Test starting in Christchurch on February 20 as any series victory, whether it be by a 1-0 or 2-0 margin, will take Australia past India.

“We want to be number one in the world in all three formats and I think this test match is a step in the right direction,” Smith told reporters. “I said when I took over as captain that I wanted to win every series away from home.

“It’s great to be one-nil up in the series against New Zealand and hopefully we can take a step up in Christchurch.” Smith felt his team had put in a complete performance against Brendon McCullum’s side, exploiting the green wicket on the first day, then building a patient innings when they batted to ensure they wore down the home attack as conditions improved.

“It was a pretty good toss to win. Having said that, we had to put the ball in the right areas for extended periods and I think we did that,” he said.

“We put the New Zealand batters under pressure and reaped the rewards from that... and with our batting, we were willing to bat for long periods and get through the tough periods.”

McCullum also praised Australia’s bowlers for their efforts on the first morning and for their ability to eke out some reverse swing when New Zealand batted a second time.

“When you know you’ve got favourable conditions it’s not always easy to execute as well as they did for as long as they did,” McCullum said of his side being reduced to 51-5 inside the first 12 overs in the first innings.

“(Then) the way they went about the second innings on that wicket, they identified pretty quickly the ball wasn’t swinging conventionally.

“Once the ball is reverse swinging, its another thing to apply pressure and execute it and they did that outstandingly well.” Smith was keen for his side to build on their win, with pace bowler James Pattinson likely to come back into contention, while seamer Peter Siddle would need tests on a back spasm.

“We have played some very good Test cricket over the last couple of months,” Smith said, referring to series wins over New Zealand and West Indies.

“Obviously to win both series at home and start this one the way we have has been really satisfying and there is a lot of improvement left in us, but I think we’re going in the right direction.”

New Zealand will, meanwhile, bring the same 13-man squad that lost the series-opening Test against Australia into the second match at Christchurch, with all-rounder Mitch Santner and batsman Ross Taylor again ruled out by injury.

Taylor had not recovered sufficiently from a muscle tear in his left side which he picked up during the One Day International series against Pakistan, while Santner was still sore from bone bruising in his right foot, New Zealand Cricket said in a statement.

 

Squad: Brendon McCullum (captain), Corey Anderson, Doug Bracewell, Trent Boult, Martin Guptill, Matt Henry, Tom Latham, Henry Nicholls, Mitchell Santner, Tim Southee, Neil Wagner, BJ Watling, Luke Ronchi, Kane Williamson.

 

Scorecard

New Zealand 1st innings 183

Australia 1st innings 562

New Zealand 2nd innings (overnight 178-4)

T. Latham c Khawaja b Lyon 63

M. Guptill c Marsh b Lyon 45

K. Williamson c Nevill b Hazlewood 22

H. Nicholls b Bird 59

B. McCullum lbw Marsh 10

C. Anderson lbw Marsh 0

B. Watling b Lyon 10

D. Bracewell lbw Hazlewood 14

M. Craig not out 33

T. Southee c Khawaja b Lyon 48

T. Boult b Marsh 12

Extras: (b2, lb5, nb4) 11

Total (for 10 wickets, 104.3 overs) 327

Fall of wickets: 1-81 (Guptill), 2-121 (Williamson), 3-157 (Latham), 4-178 (McCullum), 5-185 (Anderson), 6-214 (Watling), 7-218 (Nicholls), 8-242 (Bracewell), 9-301 (Southee), 10-327 (Boult)

Bowling: Hazlewood 29-7-75-2, Bird 19-4-51-1 (nb2), Siddle 8-0-30-0, Marsh 17.3-2-73-3 (nb2), Lyon 31-10-91-4

Result: Australia win by innings and 52 runs

Umpires: Richard Illingworth (ENG), Richard Kettleborough (ENG)

TV umpire: Ranmore Martinesz (SRI)

Match referee: Chris Broad (ENG)