MELBOURNE: New Zealand’s century-maker Tom Blundell steers through the slip region during the second Test against Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Sunday.—AP
MELBOURNE: New Zealand’s century-maker Tom Blundell steers through the slip region during the second Test against Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Sunday.—AP

MELBOURNE: Nathan Lyon took four wickets as Australia thrashed New Zealand by 247 runs to win the second Test at Melbourne and the series on Sunday with a battling century from opener Tom Blundell proving futile.

The Black Caps, chasing a massive 488 to win, were in serious trouble after a fiery James Pattinson ripped through the top order to leave them reeling at 38 for three at the iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground.

But some fighting partnerships spearheaded by Blundell delayed the inevitable until Lyon worked his magic as the pitch deteriorated.

Blundell was last man out for a swashbuckling 121 — his second Test century and his first for two years — as New Zealand were dismissed for 240 with Trent Boult not batting after fracturing his hand in the first innings.

It was the second heavy defeat for the Black Caps, who lost by 296 runs in Perth and will be playing for pride only in the final Test at Sydney later this week.

“It’s very pleasing. I thought the way we went about this Test from the moment we lost the toss was outstanding,” said Australia captain Tim Paine. :I thought our batters applied themselves superbly on day one and made it easy for Travis [Head] and I on the second day to set up a big total.”

It was Head’s first innings century and Paine’s quick-fire 79 that took the Test out of New Zealand’s reach after captain Kane Williamson’s bold decision to bowl after winning the toss.

No team had ever chased down more than 418 in Test history, though the record was set against Australia by the West Indies at St John’s in Antigua in 2003.

“I felt like there was enough in the surface to bowl first,” said Williamson. “It was obviously very important for us to be on top of our game and the surface did offer some sideways movement and swing. But credit to Australia for getting through that first session and putting 400 on the board.

“They’ve got a fantastic attack with pace and bounce but their accuracy stood apart and they did seem to get more out of that surface.”

Pattinson, playing for the injured Josh Hazlewood, did the early damage. New Zealand had reached 32-0 when he snared the key wickets of Tom Latham, batting linchpin Williamson and the experienced Ross Taylor for three just runs.

Latham, scorer of a dogged 50 in New Zealand’s 148 first innings, fell for eight when he edged a thunderous delivery to the diving Paine.

Williamson soon followed without scoring, lbw after unsuccessfully reviewing the umpire’s original decision.

Taylor didn’t fare much better, dragging onto his middle stump to leave Pattinson with figures of 3-5 at lunch off two overs.

Henry Nicholls was the only wicket to fall between lunch and tea, cleverly stumped for 33 by Paine off Lyon just one ball after he smashed the spinner for six.

Blundell, in only his third Test, and B.J. Watling put on 72 before Lyon finally broke their dangerous partnership, tempting an outside edge from the New Zealand wicket-keeper that flew to David Warner at slip and he was gone for 22.

Lyon then mopped up Colin de Grandhomme and Mitchell Santner before Tim Southee was run out in a horror mix-up, with Blundell swinging his bat before he was caught by Lyon off Marnus Labuschagne.

Paine earlier declared Australia’s second innings on 168 for five after Head was bowled by Neil Wagner for 28. Matthew Wade was unbeaten on 30 with Wagner taking 3-50.

They had resumed at 137 for four, building on their first innings 467.

Scoreboard

AUSTRALIA (1st Innings) 467 (T.M. Head 114, S.P.D. Smith 85, T.D. Paine 79, M. Labuschagne 63, D.A. Warner 41; N. Wagner 4-38, T.G. Southee 3-103).

NEW ZEALAND (1st Innings) 148 (T.W.M. Latham 50; P.J. Cummins 5-28, J.L. Pattinson 3-34).

AUSTRALIA (2nd Innings, overnight 137-4):

D.A. Warner c Blundell b Wagner 38

J.A. Burns c Watling b Santner 35

M. Labuschagne run out 19

S.P.D. Smith c Southee b Wagner 7

M.S. Wade not out 30

T.M. Head b Wagner 28

EXTRAS (B-4, LB-4, W-2, NB-1) 11

TOTAL (for five wkts decl, 54.2 overs) 168

FALL OF WKTS: 1-62, 2-100, 3-110, 4-110,, 5-168.

BOWLING: Boult 9-0-30-0; Southee 15-3-44-0; de Grandhomme 5-0-14-0 (1w); Wagner 17.2-1-50-3 (1nb, 1w); Santner 8-0-22-1.

NEW ZEALAND (2nd Innings):

T.W.M. Latham c Paine b Pattinson 8

T.A. Blundell c Lyon b Labuschagne 121

K.S. Williamson lbw b Pattinson 0

L.R.P.L. Taylor b Pattinson 2

H.M. Nicholls st Paine b Lyon 33

B.J. Watling c Warner b Lyon 22

C. de Grandhomme c Warner b Lyon 9

M.J. Santner c Paine b Lyon 27

T.G. Southee run out 2

N. Wagner not out 6

T.A. Boult absent hurt –

EXTRAS (LB-7, W-2, NB-1) 10

TOTAL (all out, 71 overs) 240

FALL OF WKTS: 1-32, 2-33, 3-35, 4-89, 5-161, 6-172, 7-212, 8-214, 9-240.

BOWLING: Starc 15-3-59-0 (1nb, 2w); Cummins 18-4-47-0; Pattinson 12-3-35-3; Lyon 23-4-81-4; Labuschagne 3-1-11-1.

RESULT: Australia won by 247 runs to lead three-match series 2-0.

UMPIRES: M. Erasmus (South Africa) and N.J. Llong (England).

TV UMPIRE: Aleem Dar (Pakistan).

MATCH REFEREE: R.B. Richardson (West Indie).

MAN-OF-THE-MATCH: Travis Head.

FIRST TEST: Perth, Australia won by 296 runs.

THIRD TEST: Sydney, Jan 3-7.

Published in Dawn, December 30th, 2019

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