• Source:REUTERS

Off-spinner Nathan Lyon displayed his control on a spin-assisting wicket to help Australia dismiss New Zealand for 196 early on the fourth day of the first test at Wellington's Basin Reserve on Sunday to win the match by an emphatic 172 runs and go 1-0 up in the series.

Notably, Lyon remained the enforcer-in-chief on Day 4 as he picked up six wickets for 65 runs to stamp his authority.

Earlier on Day 3, the hosts had started the day on 111-3 chasing a daunting victory target of 369 but Lyon sent back Rachin Ravindra for 59 and also removed Tom Blundell and Glenn Phillips inside the first hour to claim his 24th test five-wicket haul.

Daryl Mitchell and Scott Kuggeleijn offered some resistance for the seventh wicket but all-rounder Cameron Green, whose 174 not out with the bat in the first innings was instrumental to Australia's success, dismissed the latter for 26.

Mitchell batted on to make 38 despite taking a blow to the helmet from a Green delivery but ran out of partners as the New Zealand tail folded in the face of Lyon and the rest of the Australian attack.

The defeat leaves New Zealand with only one win in 24 tests against their neighbours this century ahead of the second and final match in the series in Christchurch starting on Friday.

Although Lyon will be lauded for his 10-108 over the match, there was little doubt that Green's brilliant knock in a 10th-wicket partnership of 116 runs with Josh Hazlewood set the platform for the victory.

Green's innings enabled Australia to post a tally of 383 and take 204-run first innings lead that New Zealand were always going to struggle to claw back on what was a difficult batting surface.

Despite being dismissed for 179 in their first innings, the Black Caps stormed back on day three when part-time spinner Glenn Phillips took 5-45 to help bowl out the tourists for 164.

Phillips's success only had Australians licking their lips at what Lyon, a far more experienced and accomplished slow bowler, could do on the same track.

Lyon needed a change of ends to really hit his mark on Sunday but once he did, the 36-year-old tore the heart out of the New Zealand batting order.

It was Hazlewood who hammered the final nail into New Zealand's coffin, however, the ever-reliable paceman sending down a steepling delivery that Mitchell only managed to spoon back to him for the simplest of caught-and-bowled dismissals.

Inputs from Reuters