Michael Clarke soaked up a Basin Reserve standing
ovation then doffed his cap to his ex-fiancee as he ground
New Zealand's bowlers into submission in the first test
yesterday.
Australia's vice-captain bounced back from the media frenzy
surrounding his relationship break-up to plunder his 14th
test century and lead the tourists to an imposing 316 for
four at stumps.
Clarke, 100 not out, and Marcus North, 52 not out, added an
unbroken 140 for the fifth wicket and, on a pitch getting
better and better, will have 500 in their sights today.
An impressive debut from 31-year-old New Zealand seamer Brent
Arnel, who removed Phil Hughes, 20, with his fifth ball and
later fellow opener Simon Katich for 79, meant the home side
was in command at 176 for four but it slipped away fast in a
hectic final session.
It was all about Clarke, after he quit the tour to spend a
week in Sydney, then returned last Monday having split with
high-profile model Lara Bingle.
"It [the century] was certainly better than being on zero.
"My first 10 runs took a hell of a long time today," he said.
"It's a very special feeling any time you make a hundred.
"It's been a tough couple of weeks, but the support I've had
from family and friends, and the support from Lara as well
has been tremendous.
"Without her support, I certainly wouldn't have been back
over here."
Clarke was awful early on, taking 16 deliveries to get off
the mark before reaching his half-century off 102 balls.
The next 50 took just 39 balls as he reached his century in
the day's final over after hitting 10 fours and two sixes,
raising both arms to acknowledge a generous ovation.
"I got to a stage about 80 when I said [to North] `I can't
stop thinking about my hundred' and he said `if you see it
mate, just hit it'.
"I played some horrible shots from 50 to 100 and I had a
little bit of luck.
"I'm really happy I got there.
"I wouldn't have slept too much if I was on 98 or 99."
Arnel was the pick of the bowlers, seaming the ball both ways
early on, although he suffered in the final session as
batting became easier.
Chris Martin, one for 63 off 19 overs, took the only other
wicket when his outswinger removed Michael Hussey for four.
BJ Watling did the honours there with a sharp catch at third
slip, after he had run out captain Ricky Ponting, 41, with a
direct hit from cover when the hesitant Katich pushed and
ran.
When Arnel trapped Katich in front, ending a vigil of 261
minutes and 191 balls, New Zealand had a spring in its step.
An outstanding middle restricted the tourists to 70 for two
off 28 overs.
Captain Daniel Vettori homed in with 21 overs but could not
snare a wicket, while Daryl Tuffey conceded just 35 off 16
but could not break through, and Tim Southee was expensive in
conceding 55 off 13.
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.