Christchurch Test: India stare at series defeat after another batting collapse

First strike
Trent Boult, second right, celebrates with teammates after dismissing Indian opener Mayank Agarawal. AFP

Christchurch: India stormed back into the second and final Test against New Zealand on Sunday, taking all 10 wickets to dismiss the hosts for 235 and extending their slender lead to 97 by the close of play on day two at Hagley Oval.

However, the Black Caps ran through the Indian top order to reduce the tourists to 90/6 at stumps on an extraordinary day when 16 wickets fell.

Hanuma Vihari (five batting) and Rishabh Pant, who had scored a single off a thick edge, will resume on Monday looking to give their attack something to bowl at.

Down 1-0 in the series after a thumping 10-wicket defeat in Wellington and under pressure after a final session batting collapse on day one, India needed something special to get back into the match.

Their bowlers provided it by firing for the first time on this tour, ripping through New Zealand's top order with seam and swing in the first session and mopping up the tail after some stiff resistance in the second.

Mohammed Shami took 4/81, Jasprit Bumrah finished with 3/62 and spin-bowling all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja pitched in with a couple of wickets and a most astonishing catch to winkle out Neil Wagner.

New Zealand, who resumed on 63 without loss looking to rack up a big lead over India's first-innings 242, lost their 10 wickets for the addition of just 172 runs.

Back among the wickets
Jasprit Bumrah, left, celebrates the wicket of New Zealand's Tim Southee. AFP

Opener Tom Latham (52) managed to reach his 17th Test half-century as wickets tumbled around him, before leaving a Shami delivery that nipped in to rattle his leg stump.

Wagner hit 21 but Shami got him too when Jadeja, at deep square, leaped into the air and plucked a ball that looked destined for the boundary clean out of the sky.

Kyle Jamieson marshalled the rearguard action with a gritty 49 and he was the last wicket to fall as India took a slender first-innings lead of seven runs that looked highly unlikely when play started.

Fine knock
Kyle Jamieson's fighting 49 helped New Zealand reach 235 in the first innings. Reuters

New Zealand's attack would have been licking their lips watching the movement the Indians were getting and they took full advantage of the conditions when they got their chance.

None of the Indian top order was able to get a start in the face of a hostile barrage of short-bowling with Virat Kohli's batting slump continuing.

Trent Boult (3/11) and Tim Southee had already combined to remove openers Mayank Agarwal (3) and Prithvi Shaw (14) when Colin de Grandhomme trapped Kohli in front for 14, leaving the India captain with 38 runs from his four innings in the series.

Big wicket
Colin de Grandhomme traps Virat Kohli in front of the wicket. Reuters
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