Bradley-John Watling proud of New Zealand's fight against India
Bradley-John Watling slammed 124 and although he was the only man to fall against India on Day 4 of the second Test, said he was proud of how he and Brendon McCullum (281*) batted to keep the opposition bowlers at bay.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: February 17, 2014 02:14 pm IST
New Zealand batsman Bradley-John Watling, whose world record sixth-wicket partnership with skipper Brendon McCullum on Monday, gave the home team a crucial advantage in the second Test against India, said he feels proud of the effort as the visiting bowlers put him through a "storm".
Watling and McCullum put together a 352-run sixth-wicket stand that gave New Zealand a commanding 325-run lead over India. Watling scored his third Test century, 124 runs, while his partner was unbeaten on 281 going into the last day of the series.
"I am definitely very proud of the way we went about things today. I think Brendon batted extremely well again today and to be in the position we are now after two days ago, we are pretty pleased with how things went," said Watling, after the day's play.
"It was just a grind. We just took each ball at a time, each over at a time, each hour at a time. They came at us hard and we sort of weathered the storm and then got a few runs away and just kept trying to take them as deep as we could. To lose one wicket throughout this fourth day is a pretty pleasing effort," he added.
Indeed, he was the only batsman dismissed on day four, but did enough damage to Indian hopes of equaling the series after their 40-run loss in Auckland. Watling came in at 94/5 and put on that record stand to defy the Indian hopes.
"At five for 90-odd, you are feeling the pressure a bit. They are bowling well and taking wickets, so it's again just trying to get through there and try and create a partnership and try and take it deep. Yesterday, it was pretty much about batting through the day, and try to fight our way back into the game. Today was pretty much the same," he said.
"The first hour was crucial. If we managed to not lose a wicket there, we felt we could kick on and try and keep going. Each session that started was just about starting again and keeping the partnership going and get as many runs and take as much time out of the game as possible.
"I guess after 150-odd overs in the field, their heads dropped and that tends to happen. We just managed to weather the storm there and come out at the other end," Watling added.
The focus shown by the two batsmen was the highlight of their partnership. They never made any mistakes and only McCullum gave half-chances, while Watling never really did that either.
"Brendon was pretty focussed throughout the day and yesterday of course. He has obviously got a few niggles and to have a long innings, it's the longest innings by a New Zealander. We weren't really thinking about the records to be fair.
"The announcer told us a few times what was going on out there. But you are just batting, trying to bat each ball and take each ball on its merit. There's definitely a lot to be done," he said, praising his partner.
"But it is pleasing to get a hundred. Each time you win a Test match, that is a pretty special feeling so yes, I think those probably rank pretty high as well," he added, talking of his own innings.
Talk then moved on to what the pitch could still do with only three sessions remaining in the game. India want to win the match and level the series, while New Zealand will have their eyes set on a series win here.
"It is still a good pitch and it is pretty flat. There isn't too much turn out there and the bounce is pretty consistent. I think a couple deliveries might have stayed down or a couple might have jumped a little bit but nothing too extreme. We will see overnight and have a plan tomorrow."
"We have got an hour tomorrow and we will see how we sit. It's still a good batting track but I think if the conditions are right, our bowlers could come out there and swing it and try and put them under a bit of pressure and possibly try and win a Test match," Watling signed off.