KARACHI:With a victory over Pakistan by an innings and 176 runs, New Zealand has scaled the MRF Tyres ICC Test Team Rankings to become the sixth country in the past ten years to be ranked No.1 in Test cricket.
The seventh country ever to hold the top spot in the Test rankings, New Zealand spent much of the last couple of years in second place on the table with an impeccable home record recently.
Pakistan resumed on the fourth morning at 8/1, after New Zealand had posted a mammoth lead 362, but were up against it, with Kyle Jamieson continuing his meteoric rise in Test cricket, taking another five-wicket-haul to dismantle the visitors, to end with match figures of 11/117.
There was resistance from Azhar Ali (37), Abid Ali (26) and later Faheem Ashraf (28) and Zafar Gohar (37), but the batsmen couldn’t stitch together partnerships big enough to demotivate New Zealand, and that proved to be their undoing.
It didn’t take long on the fourth morning for New Zealand to break through, Trent Boult working over night watchman Mohammad Abbas, who was convinced he hadn’t nicked it and opted for a review, only for replays to suggest the on-field umpire had made the right call.
If New Zealand thought that would trigger a slide, they were mistaken. Abid and Azhar put on 29 for the third wicket, the partnership taking up as many as 80 deliveries before Abid was seen off by Jamieson, thanks to a stunning catch by substitute fielder Will Young at point.
Azhar continued battling, with Sohail in support, and the duo added a further 33 after lunch. However, once again, Jamieson proved too hot for the Pakistan batsmen to handle, the tall pacer this time finding the edge of Sohail to break the stand. When Azhar followed suit four overs later – Jamieson had him caught behind – the writing was on the wall for Pakistan.
The Pakistan batsmen then put on mini-partnerships, only delaying what increasingly seemed inevitable. Jamieson had his fifth wicket of the innings – and 10th in the match – when his in swinger from well outside off left captain Mohammad Rizwan’s stumps in a mess. When he had Ashraf nicking one, Pakistan’s resistance was all but over.
Zafar Gohar, the debutant, resisted well thereafter, but captain Kane Williamson got into the act with the ball at the other end, dismissing Shaheen Afridi (7). When Gohar then holed out off Boult, history was sealed.