Recent Posts
RSS Feeds

Saturday, January 15, 2011

N. Zealand Media Furious After Thrashing Pakistan

Wellington: New Zealand media have hit the nation in team "extraordinarily weak" cricket on Monday after Pakistan conducted by the Black Caps in the three days of the first Test in Hamilton.

"New year - same old horror story," back of the New Zealand Herald said, adding that the defeat on Sunday beating 10-wicket was a depressing start to the new era, vaunted led by John Wright.

Wellington Dominion Post also revealed the scale of the challenge coach and former Indian captain the Black Caps Wright, who was appointed last month, following a series of one-day loss to Bangladesh and India.

"It's chaos Wright," thundered the newspaper, saying there was no excuse for the capitulation of New Zealand at home against a depleted Pakistan team of "dubious quality".

The criticism focused on the shift of the New Zealand batting second, collapsed when the black cap at all on 110, losing four windows for a career in a given time, to hand a landslide victory in Pakistan.

"There is no need to diminish, because the second innings batting numbers are on my" The Dominion Post.

The Herald chief sports writer David Leggat said the Batmen misjudgment and threw their wickets.

"Some of the battles was insane, others just stupid .... New Zealand has offered something. They are simply rolled over, he wrote, describing the display as" extraordinarily weak ".

The veteran cricket commentator Bryan Waddle asked if New Zealand could recover to salvage something from the series of two tests, which resumed in Wellington on Saturday.

"I saw the results depressing in the past, but certainly not at home and abroad," he told Radio Sport. "There is not much time to restore the pride and commitment (need) to accept the challenge that this side is Pakistan. "

The national news agency, NZPA said Wright could to comfort a commendable display of players in New Zealand on a flat field, but admitted it was difficult to defeat so overwhelming positive.

"After a quiet moment, (he) asked what he had given in," he said.

0 comments:

Post a Comment