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Mumbai maul New Zealand bowlers, Rohit Sharma out for 18
However, that was the sole high point of his brief stay as another attempt to hit Sodhi out of the park saw him being stumped.
New Delhi: Rohit Sharma failed to be among the runs on a flat track but his Mumbai teammates, Kaustubh Pawar and Suryakumar Yadav, scored contrasting centuries to frustrate New Zealand on the penultimate day of the warm-up match at Firoz Shah Kotla here.
Rohit, who managed to retain his place in India's Test squad for the New Zealand series despite an inconsistent run, was unable to stake a claim to a playing eleven spot in the first Test.
On a flat a wicket, his Mumbai revelled including Pawar (100 off 228 balls), Yadav (103 off 86), Siddhesh Lad (86 not out off 62) and rookie Arman Jaffer (69 off 123).
Mumbai, resuming the innings at 29 for one, went on to reach 431 for five by stumps on day two after New Zealand had posted 324 for 7 on the opening day. A total of 402 runs were scored in 90 overs at a run rate of 4.46.
For the visitors, it was a tough day in the field with their bowlers toiling in the sun with little success. Not a lot was expected from the quicker bowlers on a flat deck but the effort from New Zealand's spin trio of Ish Sodhi (2/132), Mitchell Santer (1/71) and Mark Craig (0/60) was also nothing to write home about.
The spinners were expected to make an impact even though the pitch continued to play true, without offering much turn.
Looking ahead to the Test series, the lone disappointment from the India's point was the early fall of Rohit, who also featured in the Duleep Trophy final to gain some form.
Walking into the middle after the fall of Jaffer, Rohit took 10 balls to get off the mark but he opened his account in style, a straight hit for a six on the bowling of leg-spinner Sodhi.
However, that was the sole high point of his brief stay as another attempt to hit Sodhi out of the park saw him being stumped.
For that brief period post lunch, Sodhi and left-arm spinner Santer were in the middle of a probing spell, leading to Rohit's dismissal.
But it was all Mumbai after that as Yadav joined Pawar at the crease. Yadav would have gone back without scoring had Sodhi had not made mess of a regulation catch off his owning bowling. That dropped catch proved costly for New Zealand as Yadav took their attack to the cleaners.
Whether it was the express pace of Trent Boult and Neil Wagner or the three spinners, it did not matter much to Yadav. Such was his dominance that he brought up his 50 as well as his 100 with a six.
He ended up smashing eight sixes with a majority of them going over mid-wicket, to go with nine fours. He raced to his hundred post tea and was dismissed soon after.