It was not an ideal preparation but New Zealand made good use of their time in the middle against a mediocre Mumbai attack on day one of their only warm-up match ahead of the three-Test series against India.
With the pitch having a thin grass cover, the ball did not spin much, allowing the visiting batsmen to bat freely.
Captain Kane Williamson (50 off 56 balls) had a comfortable stay at the crease and so did opener Tom Latham (55 off 97), Ross Taylor (41 off 57) and Mitchell Santner (45 off 59) as New Zealand declared their first innings at 324 for seven with an hour left for stumps.
Mumbai, in response, were 29 for one in 13 overs with the talented Arman Jaffer (24) and Kaustubh Pawar (5) at the crease when the stumps were drawn.
Left-arm pacer Trent Boult send back opener Jay Bista (0) caught behind with a sharp rising delivery.
The stand out bowler for Mumbai was Balwinder Sandhu Jr, who took two wickets with his gentle medium pace. The bowling otherwise was pedestrian, especially the spin trio of Vishal Dabholkar, Siddhesh Lad and Vijay Gohil, who hardly troubled the opposition batsmen.
While the visitors did not get to face serious spin like what they would be confronted with in the Test series, it was a fruitful outing in terms of getting used to the hot and humid conditions.
As many as nine batsmen got a hit in the middle with all 15 of the squad members allowed to play in the game.
The first session was entertaining for a handful of cricket fans at the Feroz Shah Kotla as New Zealand used 26 overs to reach 117 for two at lunch.
After Sandhu dismissed out-of-form Martin Guptill caught behind with an outswinger, Williamson and Latham shared a quickfire 85-run partnership.
Williamson scored the bulk of the runs in the second-wicket stand and found it easy against the spin especially left-arm orthodox Dabholkar, who ended up with expensive figures of 75 for one from 14 overs. The captain collected six fours and couple of sixes before falling to Sandhu at the stroke of lunch.
(With PTI inputs)