New Zealand reached 77-2 against Pakistan before rain forced day one of the second and final Test to be abandoned after just 21 overs in Hamilton Friday. The players took lunch 15 minutes early as the skies opened, with Jeet Raval on 35 and Ross Taylor on 29 after the early loss of Tom Latham and Kane Williamson. Three hours later, the umpires tired of waiting for the rain to clear and scratched the final session. Play will resume half-an-hour early at 10:30 a.m. Saturday (2130 GMT Friday). Pakistan won the toss in bowler-friendly conditions with a green wicket and heavy cloud cover, but apart from Mohammad Amir, their seamers were unable to pin New Zealand down. Veteran batsman Ross Taylor, who is to undergo surgery at the end of the Test to remove a growth in his left eye, hit six boundaries in his unbeaten 29 off 20 deliveries. Raval was dropped on his third delivery but otherwise looked composed as he continued the good form from his maiden Test last week when he compiled innings of 55 and 36 not out. "It was favorable conditions for the bowlers so I thought the way we played took the wind out of their sails," said New Zealand batting coach Craig McMillan, claiming first-day honors for the home side. Following the early wickets, McMillan believed New Zealand benefited from partnering the left-handed Raval with the right-handed Taylor. "It was a quality first over from Mohammad Amir where he asked some serious questions of both left handers," McMillan said. "I think that left and right-hand combination is important. At times it can put the bowlers off. Sometimes they can be a little bit slow adjusting to the different lines." Apart from Amir, who had the ball swinging through the air and nipping off the deck, the Pakistan seamers were too inconsistent with line and length to make the most of the conditions. In his opening over, Amir had Raval dropped at first slip by Sami Aslam, and removed Latham for a golden duck. The one blot on Amir's record was a spilled caught and bowled chance before Williamson had scored. But the New Zealand captain could only reach 13 before he was given out caught behind off Sohail Khan. Umpire Simon Fry turned down the initial appeal but his call was overturned on review, although television replays appeared inconclusive. With conditions favouring fast bowlers, Pakistan went into the Test with four seamers and omitted spinner Yasir Shah. New Zealand brought in Mitchell Santner as its spinner in place of Todd Astle, with the Hamilton wicket known to take turn in the fourth innings. New Zealand requires only a draw to secure its first series win over Pakistan in more than 30 years, while Pakistan needs a win to extend its two-year unbeaten series streak. Uncapped Ferguson in team Uncapped Auckland fast bowler Lockie Ferguson has been named in New Zealand's squad for their one-day series against Australia next month. The 25-year-old, who local media have reported bowls in excess of 150 kph, is the only new cap in the squad for the Chappell-Hadlee series with the 2015 World Cup winners. Opening batsman Martin Guptill has been recalled for the three matches in Sydney, Canberra and Melbourne after being dropped from the Test squad for the ongoing Pakistan series. New Zealand: Kane Williamson (captain), Todd Astle, Trent Boult, Lockie Ferguson, Martin Guptill, Colin de Grandhomme, Matt Henry, Tom Latham, Colin Munro, Jimmy Neesham, Henry Nicholls, Mitchell Santner, Tim Southee and BJ Watling. — Agencies