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Shane Bond - Source: Photosport -
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Shane Bond rolled back the years and Umar Akmal gave a glimpse of Pakistan's batting future before New Zealand finished the stronger on the third day of the first cricket test in Dunedin on Thursday.
Bond heralded his return to the test format for the first time
in two years with a compelling three-wicket burst, though by close
of play at University Oval Umar, a 19-year-old debutant, and his
elder brother, Kamran, had retrieved their side from the brink of
collapse.
Full day three scoreboard here
Umar's scintillating 129 from 160 balls - the 11th century by a Pakistani on debut - made amends for a middle order wobble as the siblings piled on 176 runs for the sixth wicket to salvage Pakistan from 85 for five.
Both were gone by stumps but the deficit was trimmed to 122 after New Zealand's innings closed on 429.
Tailenders Mohammad Aamer, 12, and Mohammad Asif restart Pakistan's innings on Friday on 307 for eight.
There was no disguising Umar's impetuous streak as he launched a counterattack soon after taking guard.
Already averaging a respectable 44.10 from 10 one-day internationals, Umar raced to his maiden test fifty from a mere 57 balls with nine boundaries and a six before reverting to defensive mode as Kamran, the vice-captain and wicketkeeper, played catch up.
Scant regard
Umar also showed scant regard for the so-called `nervous' 90s, as his second milestone loomed - creaming two improvised boundaries and a sweetly-struck six off Iain O'Brien to rocket from 87 to 101. In all, he found the ropes 16 times.
As he bent to kiss the ground, New Zealand's bowlers were practically on their knees - though respite arrived two balls later when Kamran's outside edge was snaffled by Ross Taylor at slip to end his knock on 82.
Daniel Vettori ended an enterprising 257-ball stand, though the captain's left arm spin rarely threatened.
Bond was denied during his initial first six-over burst with the new ball, but the 34-year-old's second spell was reminiscent of him at his best.
It illustrated what New Zealand had been lacking in the 20 tests he missed through injury-enforced retirement and subsequent self-imposed exile to the Indian Cricket League.
His first wicket since Herschelle Gibbs exited at The Wanderers
on November 11, 2007, also rekindled memories of his dismissal of
Cameron White at Wellington earlier that year - a stunning return
catch in the first leg of New Zealand's triumphant Chappell-Hadlee
Trophy campaign.
Mainstay
Mohammad Yousuf, the mainstay of Pakistan's batting order stood in disbelief on 17 as Bond, diving at full stretch, clasped a prodded drive centimetres above the turf.
Then with the second ball of his next over, Fawad Alam, on 29, could not help fending a brute to Brendon McCullum's gloves. Shoaib Malik, two, completed the procession when his cramped attempt at a cut clunked on to offstump.
Bond's havoc might have been even more severe and New Zealand were left to rue two opportunities to dislodge the free-spirited Umar Akmal.
On 15, Umar played a rare false shot, an ungainly attempt to sway outside a bouncer had the ball ballooning off the splice - and falling safely as Peter Fulton led the charge from first slip.
Two balls later, Daniel Flynn grassed an extravagant drive low down in the gully, and with that the brothers settled in to post a demoralising stand.
New Zealand's spearhead had the final say six overs from stumps when Umar picked out Fulton in the deep as he sought a 22nd boundary.
Bond closed with four for 93 from 24 overs.
New Zealand's other 34-year-old pace bowler Chris Martin, 2-52,
made the incisions before lunch when he had Khurram Manzoor playing
on for six and Imran Farhat leg before wicket for 22.
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