New Zealand v England: Peter Fulton hits maiden Test century
Last updated on .From the section Cricket

Third Test, Auckland (close, day one): |
New Zealand 250-1 |
Match scorecard |
Peter Fulton made a maiden Test century as New Zealand dominated England after being asked to bat in the final Test.
England opted to bowl on an Eden Park pitch that looked like it might offer some pace and bounce early on.
But the wicket had little life in it and Fulton, playing his 13th Test at the age of 34, hit an unbeaten 124 and Kane Williamson 83 in the hosts' 250-1.
Steven Finn dismissed Hamish Rutherford (37) to record England's only success on a challenging first day in Auckland.
With the third Test set up as a series decider following rain-affected draws on flat pitches in Dunedin and Wellington, England captain Alastair Cook hoped the wicket would provide his bowlers with a better chance of taking 20 wickets.
Opposing captain Brendon McCullum admitted he would also have bowled first but the pitch, dropped into the square for this match, proved to be perfect for batting despite there being tinges of green on the surface.
England's pace attack was blunted, while Monty Panesar was unable to extract any noticeable turn with his left-arm spin.
Fulton, who made his Test debut in 2006 and had a previous highest score of 75, was recalled for this series after an absence of 39 months and with an average in the low 20s.
He added 79 for the opening wicket with Rutherford and then 171 with Williamson to help the hosts punish the world's second-ranked side.
Nicknamed 'Two-Metre Peter' because of his height, Fulton became only the second New Zealander, after Zin Harris in South Africa in 1962, to score a maiden century after turning 34.
Fulton had a life on 16 when a James Anderson delivery flew off the edge of his bat and narrowly avoided the slip fielders before running away to the boundary.
The 6ft 6in opener made another mistake going after a Stuart Broad delivery a few overs later but the short boundaries at Eden Park, which is normally used for rugby, meant the ball flew over the rope for six.
Rutherford smashed two sixes off Panesar, but came undone on 37 while trying to do the same to Finn and was caught by Cook at first slip in the penultimate over before lunch.
Fulton grew in confidence after the interval and surpassed his previous Test-best with a leg-side sequence of 4-4-6 in one Panesar over.
With Williamson batting with complete control and England failing to create a noteworthy chance, the duo moved the score along to 173-1 at tea.
After being on 99 for nine balls, Fulton brought up his three figures early in the last session, having faced 203 deliveries, and the opener continued to frustrate England's labouring pace attack after the new ball was taken in the final hour.
England's body language looked poor as they grew increasingly deflated and unable to change the course of the match.
Williamson, 22, made his second successive half century, and was closing in on a flawless fourth Test ton at the close of play.
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Poor design.
Now it's blame the pitches.
How about some sportsmanship, and praise for NZ's battling efforts?
He has on number of occasions playing in the Lancashire Leagues.
Fact is if a team wants to be number 1 in the test format, you have to take 20 wickets no matter what the pitch is like. Only losers make excuses not champions.
There will likely be a result in this game - there is enough life in this pitch. If either team wanted to guarantee a result they should have gone in with 5 fresh bowlers instead of 4 toiling away- not aggressive enough approach to win
The pitch used to be diagonal which naturally made all boundaries a bit bigger, but they changed if after the Rugby W/Cup because - get this - an up and down pitch "suited those in the corporate boxes better for viewing standards".
How ridiculous is that? The pompous "Corporate Box" toffs come before the general masses.
Harden up bro. I will be up all night watching the Kiwis when we tour the Land of Hope and Glory. Then I will be off to work in the morning. No problem. Just crack open a cold lager for breakfast and it will get you through the day.
I hope it makes England work harder and they should never expect anything to be easy at Test level.
"You seem to have forgotten the last test where we batted all of the first day losing only 2 wickets or the 2nd innings"
Nope - I have not forgotten. Your batting was just as boring then as NZ's was today.
No mate - we don't have to do anything, you or anyone else in the cricket world would "like" us to do. Why don't you go tell the Indians to produce green seamers instead of the spin friendly dustbowls. I find it highly patronising that we should produce pitches to help the opposing team.
Stop whingeing as you really are starting to sound like spoilt little pommy brats.
Kiwi's have peresented 3 rubbish pitches designed for boring cricket. Well done for making the most of it though, no sour grapes just an observation.