Clarke falls short as Aussies falter

Michael Clarke just missed a century as New Zealand bowled Australia out for only 214 on day one of the first Test in Brisbane.

Clarke’s gutsy 98 off 217 balls lasted almost five hours, but the vice-captain was the only batsman to offer resistance of any substance on a green pitch.

Michael Clarke

Michael Clarke faced 217 balls for his 98 before he was last out - to seamer Jesse Ryder

Buy this photo

New Zealand openers Jamie How and Aaron Redmond then had a nervous time seeing out five overs, before the umpires offered bad light, but were able to reach seven without loss at stumps.

The Black Caps attack was earlier spearheaded by seamer Tim Southee, who reduced the hosts to 23 for three - and New Zealand were still well on top at tea, which Australia took on to 152 for seven.

Southee (4-63) completed his haul when Brett Lee was eighth out to an excellent one-handed diving catch by wicketkeeper Brendon McCullum - before Clarke shared a last-wicket stand of 31 with Stuart Clark, which ended anti-climactically when the number five was bowled by part-time medium-pacer Jesse Ryder.

New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori had put his hosts in - and Southee, in his first Test against Australia, saw off the top three in only half-an-hour.

The 20-year-old extracted good bounce and movement to clean up Matthew Hayden, Simon Katich and Ricky Ponting in quick succession.

Mike Hussey worked hard to rebuild the damage in a 73-run partnership with Clarke - but his dismissal, when he shouldered arms and was trapped lbw by Chris Martin, was the beginning of the end.

Tim Southee

Young paceman Tim Southee removed Australia's top three in the first half hour of play

Andrew Symonds, Shane Watson and Brad Haddin all surrendered meekly.

Symonds' short but lively stay was a head-turner, on his return to the Test fold after disciplinary problems, containing three consecutive boundaries off all-rounder Grant Elliot's seventh over.

Redmond failed to hold a tough chance offered by Symonds, who was to take eight runs off one Iain O’Brien delivery when he and Clarke ran four - and the visitors then conceded a further four in overthrows.

O'Brien had the last laugh when two balls later he had Symonds caught behind.

Watson’s attempted cut at O’Brien resulted only in another edge behind, and Haddin went to the last ball before tea when he could not resist a wider delivery from Ryder and was caught at second slip.

Clarke was unaffected by the wickets falling around him and kept the score ticking to help Australia nudge past 200 before falling to Ryder in pursuit of three figures.

Leave a comment

To comment, please login or register on the site.

The Great Exhibition

icon-40x40-cricket-50012

The great summer of cricket in 2009, all players, all formats, all fans:

Start Playing

icon-40x40-cricket-50012

Want to start playing cricket - or re-kindle your playing days?

Video on ECBtv

icon-40x40-ecb-tv-50014

Get all the latest features, news and action

Buy Tickets

Icon 40x40 Tickets

All the contact information and links to help you buy match tickets

npower Ashes Series 2009

Icon 40x40 Npower Ashes

Only a year and the Aussies are here - here's all the info you need

Contact ECB

icon-40x40-ecb-logo-50013

Contact ECB by email, phone or fax - or feedback via ecb.co.uk

Find Fixtures

icon-40x40-calendar-50005

Want to watch some cricket? Find the matches you want to see

Use our RSS feeds

Icon 40x40 Rss

Get our news and scores feeds via RSS to your desktop or mobile

Blogs on ecb.co.uk

icon-40x40-blogs-50003

Enjoy our blogs, right across the cricketing spectrum, from players to volunteers

Official site of the England and Wales Cricket Board

$parameters.q $results.totalResults