Pattinson continues to impress for Australia

Australia are off to a great start in second Test as young new bowler James Pattinson helps to bowl New Zealand out.

James Pattinson
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 On fire against New Zealand, James Pattinson has taken no time settling into Test cricket [AFP]

Australia paceman James Pattinson continued his crash course in Test cricket on Friday, taking his second five-wicket haul in an as many innings to help dismiss New Zealand for 150 before tea on the opening day of the second Test.

The 21-year-old Pattinson, man-of-the-match on his Test debut in last week’s nine-wicket win, returned 5-51 against a New Zealand lineup missing ex-captain Daniel Vettori.

Vettori strained his left hamstring and withdrew hours before the match, making him unavailable to play the steady hand the New Zealand innings needed as he did in the first innings of the series-opener at the Gabba when he fell four runs short of a century.

Australian-born Dean Brownlie continued his strong form with the bat, scoring 56 – his third half century in five Test innings – before he was bowled by Pattinson as the last three New Zealand wickets fell for four runs.

Pattinson will start the second innings on a hat-trick after removing Brownlie and No. 11 Chris Martin on consecutive balls.

In reply, Australia were 12 for one when rain stopped play, with opener Phil Hughes (4) out cheaply again to a catch behind the wicket.

Pacemen dominate

Hughes, considered lucky to hang onto his opening spot after the first Test, edged a boundary through a crowded slips cordon to get off the mark, but the left-hander again couldn’t resist a good ball outside off stump and angled a Martin delivery to second slip to start the third over.

David Warner was unbeaten on seven at stumps.

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     Brownlie was the only Kiwi to make a half-century during first innings [AFP] 

The pacemen were always likely to dominate on a green wicket and in overcast conditions at Bellerive Oval, where Australia has never lost a Test match, so it was an important toss for Michael Clarke to win.

He wisely elected to bowl first and the Black Caps were all out in 45.5 overs for the same total they made in the second innings of the Gabba Test last week.

“When the toss went up, the bowlers were yelling out ‘bowl, bowl’ – it was a pretty good toss to win,” Pattinson said.

Pattinson defended Hughes’ performance on a tough wicket.

“Obviously if you go out there and blast 100, you are pretty good batsman,” Pattinson said.

“The wicket is doing a lot. I am just looking forward to him getting another chance in the second innings when it does
flatten out.”

Australia retained the same starting XI as Brisbane last Sunday, opting not to bring in allrounder Daniel Christian despite questions over Hughes’ form and technique.

Source: AP