Mills and Nash turn match on
its head
From NZPA, 11 January 2001
Wellington cricket coach Vaughn Johnson
went in to bat for his jaded, injury-troubled bowlers last
night after Dion Nash and Kyle Mills had used theirs to lift
Auckland off the canvas and back into an absorbing Shell Trophy
scrap at the Basin Reserve.
When Mills joined Nash at the crease
after lunch, Auckland were on the ropes at 109 for seven in
their second innings.
With a overall lead of just 63 and the
Wellington attack humming, it looked like Auckland would struggle
to last day three, let alone go the full distance.
But by stumps Mills, unbeaten on 107,
and Nash, not long out for exactly 100, had guided Auckland
to 317 for eight, an overall lead of 271, and it was Wellington
taking all the punches.
The dangerous Andre Adams was undefeated
on seven when stumps were drawn.
With another bland Basin Reserve pitch
getting lower and slower and taking turn to interest leg-spinner
Brooke Walker, Auckland will fancy their chances of pulling
off a remarkable outright victory today.
Johnson admitted it was disappointing
his attack could not finish Auckland off, but would not hear
a harsh word spoken against his sore bowlers.
He revealed that the injury-prone Carl
Bulfin was struggling with tendonitis in both knees, while
strike bowling partner Andrew Penn had needed a pain-killing
injection.
Penn has ripped a "big chunk" of skin
off the outside of his foot and was clearly below full pace
and effectiveness.
Like all five bowlers used by Wellington
captain Matthew Bell, Penn's line drifted on either side of
the wicket and Nash and Mills cashed in.
Johnson did not want Wellington's loose
bowling to detract from Nash and Mills' potentially match-winning
partnership of 185.
When Nash was caught at mid-on by Bell
off Bulfin's bowling, it ended the gritty stand just four
runs shy of the record Auckland eighth-partnership set by
William Carson and Alexander Matheson, also against Wellington,
in the 1938-39 season.
"If I was in Auckland coach Tony Sail's
camp I'd be very proud of them both," Johnson said. "Of course
I hated every single moment of it, but they deserve a big
pat on the back because they were two of the best innings
I've seen since I've been in first-class cricket."
Resuming at 16 for one, Auckland were
in deep trouble when Bulfin bowled opener Blair Pocock and
medium-pacer Iain O'Brien yorked Richard King and had No 3
John Aiken caught behind off consecutive overs.
Rookie Black Cap James Franklin then
chimed in by removing Lou Vincent and Walker to catches behind
the wicket before offspinner Jeetan Patel trapped Tana Canning
to really ruin Auckland's lunch.
But the bowlers blew a gasket after lunch
and Wellington will have their work cut out with the bat today
to achieve the outright win which had looked so certain.
Mills, who struck 13 boundaries in his
255-minute, 197-ball stay, easily surpassed his previous highest
first-class score - an unbeaten 81 against Wellington on Eden
Park No 2 last summer.
The 21-year-old's gutsy innings came
after being sidelined for eight weeks with his wrist broken
during Auckland's Max campaign late last year.
"My shot selection was a bit limited
because of the wrist and when I first went out, the ball was
reverse swinging and keeping low," Mills said. "It actually
got easier when they took the new ball because it carried
through. It was just awesome to bat with Dion and turn it
around and give ourselves a good chance of winning."
[Articles]
|