The Troubled Rupee

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

REUTERS SHOWCASE

Slowing Down QE

Slowing Down QE

Bernanke says Fed likely to reduce bond buying this year.  Full Article 

Surveillance System

Surveillance System

India sets up elaborate system to tap phone calls, e-mail.  Full Article 

Monsoon Floods

Monsoon Floods

Death toll in Uttarakhand monsoon floods crosses 150  Full Article 

China Factory Activity

China Factory Activity

China June flash HSBC PMI hits nine-month low on weak demand.  Full Article 

FIIs and Banks

FIIs and Banks

High FII holding makes private banks vulnerable after Fed - analysts.  Full Article 

Sony's Plans

Sony's Plans

Sony CEO asks for patience as shareholders press on spinoff plan.  Full Article 

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Buy, Sell or Hold?

Confused while buying stocks? Get buy, sell or hold recommendations from VantageTrade.  Full Coverage 

Reuters India Mobile

Reuters India Mobile

Get the latest news on the go. Visit Reuters India on your mobile device.  Full Coverage 

Captain Taylor sets tone with attacking hundred

Related Topics

1 of 3. New Zealand's captain Ross Taylor hits a shot during the first day of their second test cricket match against India in Bangalore August 31, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Vivek Prakash

BANGALORE | Fri Aug 31, 2012 7:03pm IST

BANGALORE (Reuters) - New Zealand captain Ross Taylor kept his promise of attacking India's spinners by smashing an entertaining hundred as the visitors reached 328 for six at the close of the first day of the second and final test in Bangalore on Friday.

Kruger van Wyk (63 not out) and Doug Bracewell (30 not out) carried on the good work after Taylor's dismissal, adding an unbeaten 82 runs for sixth wicket before bad light ended play 35 minutes early.

The 28-year-old Taylor had promised a positive approach at the Chinnaswamy Stadium after New Zealand lost 18 wickets to the Indian spinners in the first test in Hyderabad, which the hosts won by an innings and 115 runs to go 1-0 up in the two-test series.

New Zealand opted to bat first after Taylor won the toss and their intent was immediately clear as the batsmen attempted to put India on the backfoot.

"Ross is a class player and some of the shots he played were really special," opener Martin Guptill, who started the fireworks with a quickfire 53, told reporters.

"We had a meeting on how to go about it and about the positive intent. We executed our plans really well today."

Taylor hit 16 boundaries and two sixes and attacked the bowlers from the onset to complete his seventh test century, and his third against India, off just 99 balls.

He slog-swept the spinners effectively, played the cut shot fiercely and added 107 runs with Daniel Flynn (33) for the fourth wicket at a breathtaking scoring rate.

Taylor and Flynn combined to add 72 runs off the first 10 overs after lunch before Flynn fell leg before to off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin while attempting another sweep shot.

Pragyan Ojha kept India in the hunt by picking up his fourth wicket shortly after the tea break when Taylor was also out leg before trying to sweep the left-arm spinner.

In the morning, India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni handed the new ball to Ojha to capitalise on New Zealand's spin frailty but it was paceman Zaheer Khan who struck the first blow in the second over of the innings.

Opener Brendon McCullum was the first to fall for a duck when Zaheer caught him plumb in front of the stumps in his first over.

Guptill, dropped on 17 by Virat Kohli in the slips off Zaheer, went on the attack and completed his half-century, helped by eight boundaries.

The right-hander mistimed a drive against Ojha to be caught at mid-wicket by Gautam Gambhir.

"We have to keep up the positive intent. If we put 400-450 on the board and attack them then it's going to put some pressure on India," Guptill added.

"There is a bit of swing and seam on this wicket and if we can pick up a few wickets early on, it'll be great."

Ojha then dismissed Kane Williamson (17) leg before and also got rid of all-rounder James Franklin (eight).

"It was a good first-day wicket and they were trying to be aggressive," Ojha said. "I think that was their game plan and Ross played quite well too.

"I think taking six wickets on this kind of a pitch was a good effort."

(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; editing by Patrick Johnston and Tom Bartlett)

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.