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WELLINGTON, March 3, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Australia captain Pat Cummins heaped
praise on team-mates Nathan Lyon and Cameron Green on Sunday for match-
winning performances his side secured a 172-run triumph over New Zealand in
the first Test.
Lyon spun the visitors to victory in the morning session on day four in
Wellington, taking six wickets as New Zealand crumbled to 196 all out.
New Zealand lost their last seven wickets before lunch on Sunday for 70 runs,
with four falling to off-spinner Lyon, who finished with figures of 6-65 off
27 overs and 10-108 in the match.
The 36-year-old capitalised on spin-friendly Basin Reserve conditions and
some meek batting from New Zealand, who began the day on 111-3 needing an
unlikely 258 more runs to win.
Green's career-high unbeaten 174 on day one rescued Australia from 89-4,
having been put into bat, to reach 383 and set up a decisive 204-run first-
innings lead.
It gave Green the nod over Lyon as man of the match and Cummins said that was
a fair outcome.
"Cam was amazing, he was really the difference in the end," Cummins said.
"I thought the way he went about it, with that intent, really put the
pressure back on the bowlers on day one.
"There was as much bounce as I've seen in any wicket for a long time but
thankfully it spun which, with Nathan in our side, is always a pretty good
thing."
New Zealand pace bowler Will O'Rourke is a doubt for the second and final
Test starting in Christchurch on Friday after leaving the field with a tight
hamstring on day three.
- Phillips praise -
Captain Tim Southee hailed Glenn Phillips after the all-rounder top scored
with 71 in the first innings and claimed career-best figures of 5-45 with his
part-time off-spin as Australia were dismissed for 164 in the second innings.
"Glenn's still new to Test cricket and new to bowling, and he's doing a great
job," Southee said of the 27-year-old.
"We'll debrief it and obviously move to a different ground now at Hagley
Oval. It's a ground where we've had a lot of success."
Southee and batsman Kane Williamson will both play their 100th Test in the
second and final match of the series in Christchurch.
The final morning's capitulation began in the seventh over when Lyon claimed
the key wicket of Rachin Ravindra for 59.
Ravindra had only added three to his overnight score when he failed to keep a
cut shot down and was caught by Cameron Green at point.
Tom Blundell was caught close in by Travis Head without scoring in the same
over and Glenn Phillips was trapped leg before by Lyon for one soon
afterwards, to expose the tail.
Scott Kuggeleijn struck 26 off 28 balls before he failed to control a short
ball from Green to be caught by wicketkeeper Alex Carey and Matt Henry fell
for 14, caught at slip by Steve Smith off Josh Hazlewood.
Southee became Lyon's sixth victim before Daryl Mitchell was the last wicket
to fall, for 38, caught and bowled by Hazlewood.