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Stabroek News

Kiwis put SA on the backfoot
published: Sunday | April 16, 2006


- REUTERS
South Africa's Jacques Kallis gets his shot away for 4 runs as New Zealand's Brendon McCullum looks on during play on the first day of their first Test cricket match in Pretoria.

CENTURION, South Africa (Reuters):

NEW ZEALAND medium-pacer Kyle Mills took four wickets to reduce South Africa to 266 for eight on the opening day of the first Test yesterday.

Mills maintained a tight line and extracted bounce to take a career-best four for 43. Left-arm paceman James Franklin captured three for 67, after South Africa won the toss.

Captain Stephen Fleming became the first New Zealander to reach 100 Test caps, while Kallis and Pollock joined the retired Gary Kirsten as the only South Africans to reach the milestone.

BAD STROKE

Mills first struck in the fifth over when Herschelle Gibbs, on six, played a bad stroke to an inswinger and edged the ball on to his middle stump.

Captain Graeme Smith, returning to action after missing the third Test against Australia with a finger injury, and Boeta Dippenaar scored steadily and took the home side to lunch without further drama.

Franklin took his first wicket in the third over after lunch by trapping Smith in front for 45 to end the second-wicket stand at 79.

Six overs later Dippenaar reached 50 with a straight drive for four off Mills. Dippenaar attempted to hook Mills' next ball, a shorter delivery, and spooned a catch to James Fulton at short midwicket to be out for 52.

Mills reduced South Africa to 130 for four before tea when Ashwell Prince (9) steered a head-high catch to Scott Styris at second slip.

Jacques Kallis scored 38 before being flummoxed by a slow, swinging yorker from Franklin that bowled him in the fifth over after tea.

BOWLED

Franklin struck again six overs later when he angled a delivery across AB de Villiers, who played down the wrong line and was bowled for 27.

Mark Boucher (18) edged a delivery from medium pacer Chris Martin to third slip, where Nathan Astle palmed the ball upward for Stephen Fleming to complete the catch.

Shaun Pollock clipped four fours in his 24 before edging a delivery from Mills to Styris at second slip. Nicky Boje was 20 not out at stumps

Mills' previous career-best figures were the three for 29 he took in the second Test against the West Indies in Wellington this season.

New Zealand's medium-pacers ensured the absence of express bowler Shane Bond, who was forced out of the match with a knee injury, was hardly felt.

"We felt if we went out hard in the middle session that would be the winning of the day," Mills told reporters. "That was the plan and we felt as if we did that as a bowling unit.

"Overall we're pretty happy although we probably bowled too many four-balls at times."

Dippenaar said the South African effort was below par.

"We weren't surprised the wicket did a lot but I think we would have liked to have been in a position where we could have kicked on to a total of 340," he said.

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