BJ Watling
New Zealand's test side assemble in Wellington today with
some leftover confidence but also the knowledge they'll need to
play out of their skins to stop Australia steamrolling them in
the two-match series starting at the Basin Reserve on Friday.
Captain Daniel Vettori's side bowled and fielded brilliantly
to seal a 51-run win in the fifth and final one-day
international at Westpac Stadium on Saturday as Australia
retained the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy 3-2.
It was a handy boost for the flagging New Zealanders who'd
lost three in a row, and gave Ricky Ponting's tourists a
message they were still up for a fight.
Still, two of their best players from the ODI series -- Shane
Bond and Scott Styris -- have retired from test cricket and
the likes of top-three Tim McIntosh, BJ Watling and Peter
Ingram will be playing their first tests against the powerful
Australian side.
"We've got some players who are developing at the test level
and some are more experienced than others. It's a great
challenge to go up against one of the best sides in the
world," said selector/coach Mark Greatbatch, noting
Australia's world test ranking of three compared with New
Zealand's six.
"We need to compete every day for five days and just fight
really hard and smart and see if we can take the Australians
to five days. If we can do that, then we're a chance."
Greatbatch and fellow selectors Daniel Vettori and Glenn
Turner named a largely predictable 13 including the same 11
who beat Bangladesh by 121 runs in Hamilton last month, plus
seamer Brent Arnel and 32-test batsman Mathew Sinclair who
was described as top-order batting cover.
Vettori was confirmed as a No 6 batsman, meaning five
specialist bowlers and potentially another chance for
offspinner Jeetan Patel on his home ground, depending on the
state of the Basin Reserve pitch.
The New Zealand captain said the momentum from the finale of
a torrid ODI series was handy, but rest was their priority
early in the week.
"We've played three games in five days and it gives everyone
a break. It's a good thing and a bad thing, we've touched on
the confidence that's there and maybe you want to get
straight back into it. But there's a lot of tired bodies on
both sides so it's probably a good break," Vettori said.
"Any time you beat Australia it's a great feeling and it'll
give us a little bit of confidence going into the test match
and give us a bit of confidence heading into a World Cup next
year."
Newcomers from outside the ODI squad who faced Australia are
McIntosh, Watling, Sinclair, Patel, Chris Martin and Arnel.
Australia's test reinforcements were scheduled to arrive
today, including the returning vice-captain Michael Clarke,
batsmen Simon Katich, Phil Hughes and Marcus North, and young
legspinner/batsman Steve Smith.
Katich and Clarke boost an imposing Australian batting lineup
while the bowling will be largely similar to the ODIs with
left-armer Mitchell Johnson again the main dangerman.
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