Cameron Green stood up to be counted with a brilliant century to rescue Australia’s innings on day one of the first Test against New Zealand while also silencing critics of his controversial recall to No.4 in the order.
Green reached triple figures on the last over of the day after he thumped Will O’Rourke for three boundaries to lift the visitors to a modest 9-279 after the Black Caps bowlers dominated proceedings.
The 24-year-old all-rounder went from 50 to his ton in 46 deliveries and will resume on 103 on Friday with Josh Hazlewood yet to open his account at the other end.
Green hit 16 fours in his 155-ball stay at the crease to register just his second century in his 27th Test and first since his recent Test recall with the only other one coming in India nearly 12 months ago.
“It feels really good. It was a pretty tough wicket out there. It was just one of those days where somebody needed to bat through and I was glad it was me,” he said.
“It was nice to stick out there and hopefully put a semi-competitive total on the board.”
New Zealand’s all-pace attack ripped through Australia’s top order, giving the Black Caps a firm foothold in the first Test in Wellington.
Led by Matt Henry’s four-wicket haul, New Zealand have the upper hand after opting for a four-pronged pace attack with second-gamers Will O’Rourke and Scott Kuggeleijn also backing up captain Tim Southee after he sent Australia in after winning the toss.
They found themselves on the back foot when Steve Smith (31) fell to Henry just prior to lunch as Australia limped to 1-62 at the main break.
The Kiwi bowlers upped their attack after the interval, with Henry, Kuggeleijn and O’Rourke all taking wickets in a damaging hour.
On Australia’s first Test tour of New Zealand in eight years, the Black Caps revelled in conditions they know all too well – a fresh southerly breeze in the Kiwi capital, overcast conditions and a green-tinged pitch.
Henry was the chief tormentor, fizzing the ball at a good length and forcing Australia’s batters to make tough decisions with every delivery.
Smith was his first victim, defending to a ball which moved off the pitch and edging to wicketkeeper Tom Blundell, who moved well to his right to take the catch.
Marnus Labuschagne (one) followed shortly after the break having barely troubled the scorers, edging Kuggeleijn to first slip with another that deviated from the pitch.
It was Labuschagne’s fifth failure in a row after four scores of 10 runs or fewer against West Indies.
After dogged resistance on a tough day, Usman Khawaja (33 off 118 deliveries) fell from a Henry change-up.
The 32-year-old ripped an inswinger that crashed through Khawaja’s defence and bowled him.
When Travis Head (one) followed – caught behind off O’Rourke – the very next over, Australia were rocking at 4-89 with two new batters at the crease.
Green and Mitchell Marsh put together’s Australia’s best partnership, upping the run rate as well courtesy of Marsh, who struck half-a-dozen boundaries and a six.
But he fell to Henry when a pull shot ballooned in the air no further than Blundell’s gloves and when Alex Carey departed to Kuggieleijn for 10, the Aussies were 6-176.
The tail didn’t contribute many runs but stuck around long enough for Green to up the scoring ante and surge to his century.
Mitchell Starc made nine in a 35-run stand, Pat Cummins added 16 in a 33-run partnership and Nathan Lyon contributed five as 23 more runs were added before falling to the last ball of the penultimate over of the day.
Green was nine shy of his ton and after blasting two boundaries, cut a short ball away to the rope at point to reach his milestone off the second-last delivery of the day.
Cummins said he would have made the same call to bowl first if he had won the toss.
“We were going to bowl but not too upset with that,” he said at the time.
with AAP