‘If we keep the momentum going, we can expose them’

NZ captain McCullum confident of upsetting India in first Test

Home captain Brendon McCullum was unfazed by the huge gulf in the rankings between the two sides, where India are second to New Zealand's lowly eighth. PHOTO: AFP

AUCKLAND:
New Zealand are quietly confident of their ability to exploit the green state of the Eden Park wicket and upset India in the first Test starting in Auckland on Thursday.

A combination of a bowler-friendly pitch and the success of the same XI, who won back-to-back Tests in similar conditions against the West Indies in December, meant the selection was a no-brainer for Captain Brendon McCullum.

"It's a bit of both,” he said on Wednesday. “It's a nice luxury to be able to continue with the same team, and obviously the pitch as well.”

It was definitely a bowl-first wicket, he added, with New Zealand intent on continuing the short-pitched attack that proved to be India's undoing in the just completed One-Day International (ODI) series won by New Zealand 4-0.

The home captain was also unfazed by the huge gulf in the rankings between the two sides, where India are second to New Zealand's lowly eighth.

"We know how tough a challenge it is but we've got a quiet confidence that if we continue to bowl and field as well as we have done this summer, then we can expose some of the not-so-strong aspects of their game."


The pitch has ‘a decent covering of grass’ and the promise of more bounce than when New Zealand had England on the ropes here last year, only to be denied victory by a heroic century from Matt Prior on the final day.

You can pick and choose in Tests: Dhoni

While New Zealand were confident enough to name their side 24 hours before the toss, India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni was more circumspect in delaying naming his side as late as possible.

He also batted away any suggestion that India's well-documented failings against the short-pitched deliveries in the one-day series would have a bearing on the Tests.

"The plus point in Test matches is you can pick and choose," he said, adding that India were hampered in the ODIs by their openers not setting a solid enough platform.

"If you don't get too many runs in the first 10 [overs], it means the middle order have to come in to play those strokes because the asking rate keeps on rising if you keep leaving them."
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