Key events
7th over: New Zealand 16-1 (Conway 6, Williamson 8) Thanks Taha, morning everyone. This is a gripping arm-wrestle within an arm-wrestle: England trying to make Conway and Williamson play as much as possible; Conway and Williamson leaving whenever they can.
Woakes’s fourth over isn’t the best, allowing as it does five leaves out of six. Not sure why I turned into Angus Deayton there.
6th over: New Zealand 15-1 (Williamson 7, Conway 6) Gorgeous from Atkinson, who finds some decent carry as he squares up Conway from around the wicket. That’ll be all from me – Rob Smyth is in for the rest of the day.
5th over: New Zealand 15-1 (Williamson 7, Conway 6) Woakes brings the ball back into Williamson, but the little master judges his leave perfectly before punching the next ball into the covers for two. The over ends with the former Test captain driving through mid-off for four, a touch uppishly.
4th over: New Zealand 9-1 (Williamson 1, Conway 6) Conway gets properly going with a solid punch through mid-off for four.
3rd over: New Zealand 3-1 (Williamson 0, Conway 2) Woakes gets the ball to shoot past Kane Williamson’s outside edge with a lush outswinger. The quick is finding his rhythm.
WICKET! Latham c Brook b Woakes 1 (New Zealand 3-1)
Woakes strikes! He goes around the wicket with the wobble seam, forces Latham to play, and the outside edge is nabbed by Harry Brook, low at second slip.
2nd over: New Zealand 3-0 (Latham 1, Conway 1) Atkinson goes around the wicket to Conway, who he had caught and bowled in the first innings. Conway decides to play it slow, allowing the bowler a maiden … oops, no, Atkinson oversteps with the final ball. Conway leaves the re-bowled delivery alone.
1st over: New Zealand 2-0 (Latham 1, Conway 1) Chris Woakes takes the new ball against Tom Latham … and immediately has the ball zipping past the outside edge. The next ball is tucked away into the leg side for one. Woakes didn’t look his sharpest in the first innings, going wicketless, still trying to prove his worth overseas. Conway tucks away for one himself.
What a bizarre innings, with New Zealand dropping an obscene amount of chances. Henry finishes with 4-84 while O’Rourke bowled brilliantly for figures of … 1-138 from 25 overs. England lead by 151.
England are all out for 499
WICKET! Bashir c Southee b Henry 5 (England 499 all out)
Matt Henry finds Bashir’s outside edge … but the ball flies past slip and away for four. Bashir ends the over with a slog … the ball flies high and Southee does very well, running to midwicket to hold on.
102nd over: England 495-9 (Carse 33, Bashir 1) Carse opts against singles early in the over, protecting Bashir from the wrath of O’Rourke. The England fast bowler hits down the ground to pick up two before ending the over with a heave over long-on for six! England’s tail are having a ball today.
101st over: England 487-9 (Carse 25, Bashir 1) I mean no disrespect to Shoaib Bashir, but there’s quite a batting drop-off from Carse to him. The No 11 clips for one before Carse dabs into the off side for a single.
WICKET! Stokes c Southee b Henry 80 (England 485-9)
There won’t be a ton for Stokes. His cross-bat hit off Henry, the ball dug into the surface, finds Southee at long-on.
100th over: England 485-8 (Carse 24, Stokes 80) O’Rourke wears a pained expression walking back to his mark, perhaps stunned by how he only has one wicket despite bowling well and creating several chances. The quick tests Carse out with an electric yorker, but the bat gets down in time. Carse then dabs the ball over the slip cordon for a boundary. And then six, with Carse walking across his stumps before launching over fine leg!
99th over: England 475-8 (Carse 14, Stokes 80) Carse is tested by Henry’s short ball … and swings hard over fine leg for six! More bumpers follow but Carse doesn’t get in any trouble.
98th over: England 466-8 (Carse 6, Stokes 79) Stokes shuffled across to the leg side numerous times in that first session, and he’s up to the same after lunch, but can’t make contact against O’Rourke. New Zealand’s giant quick peppers Stokes with the short ball, the England captain eventually getting himself a single before Carse is dropped! The No 10 swings hard and Glenn Phillips can’t hold on, making plenty of ground from point. New Zealand’s misery in the field continues.
And we’re back for the second session, Stokes and Carse the batters, O’Rourke the bowler.
Here’s some fun stats stuff: Harry Brook’s Test batting average against New Zealand is exactly 100 after five innings, with his strike rate 101.01.
Lunch
97th over: England 459-8 (Stokes 78, Carse 5) The lead, I should state, has risen to three figures. Stokes punches for one to end the over and the session. It’s been a fine one for England – they’ve gone at six an over.
Nathan Green makes a great point: “Is this peak Bazball? England has a first class hundy at 10 but not at 3.”
96th over: England 456-8 (Carse 5, Stokes 76) Brydon Carse is greeted with a quality yorker from Will O’Rourke, which the No 10 somehow squeezes away to the boundary. Carse has two first-class tons and averages 30-odd in first-class cricket, by the way. Stokes shuffles to the leg side before pulling O’Rourke away for four.
WICKET! Atkinson c Phillips b Smith 48 (England 445-8)
Don’t bowl short to him! Atkinson hooks Smith over fine leg for six to move to 44 off 34. He then shuffles to the leg side to slap Smith through extra cover for another boundary. But he won’t get a 50 … Atkinson doesn’t nail the pull this time round as Glenn Phillips does well to hold on at deep backward square.
95th over: England 445-8 (Carse 0, Stokes 70)
94th over: England 431-7 (Atkinson 35, Stokes 69) Atkinson hits the ball really hard. He cracks one to deep point for a single before Stokes shows off some finesse, punching O’Rourke through mid-off for four. Stokes shuffles to the leg side twice to make room but O’Rourke follows him with the ball to stop any damage.
93rd over: England 426-7 (Atkinson 34, Stokes 65) Stokes wants to match Atkinson, swinging wild against Smith, but has to settle for an edge that travels over slip to the boundary.
92nd over: England 421-7 (Atkinson 33, Stokes 61) Stokes is happy to take the singles so Atkinson can let loose, which is some compliment. And then another four, this time off O’Rourke as Atkinson swings hard through the off side. There’s a small appeal as a catch loops up to backward point, but the ball just slapped Stokes’ thigh pad, not the bat.
91st over: England 413-7 (Atkinson 27, Stokes 60) Atkinson smashes Smith through the covers for four – he’s going at better than a run a ball. Atkinson then plays another pull, this time along the carpet, behind square leg for four more. He’s thriving against the bumper.
90th over: England 402-7 (Atkinson 17, Stokes 59) Atkinson pulls Matt Henry for six! He does have all-rounder potential. Another pull shot ends the over … with the ball not carrying to Rachin Ravindra in the deep.
89th over: England 395-7 (Atkinson 10, Stokes 59) Nathan Smith is back, replacing Southee. Stokes has curbed his adventure at the crease since Brook’s dismissal, cutting out the skip down the pitch. He hits to mid-on for a single before Atkinson collects two with a leg-side clip.
88th over: England 390-7 (Atkinson 6, Stokes 58) Atkinson gets the forward defence out as Matt Henry thunders in. The over ends with the No 9 squirting the ball through point for another three.
87th over: England 387-7 (Atkinson 3, Stokes 58) Gus Atkinson, Test centurion, joins Stokes, with Southee getting the ball to hoop. Atkinson shows his batting chops with a leg-side clip for three.
WICKET! Woakes c Latham b Southee 1 (England 382-7)
Southee strikes immediately after drinks, with Tom Latham getting rid of his catching blues with a low grab at second slip! Woakes pushed at the ball outside off. It goes up to the TV umpire to check the catch is clean – cue the awkwardness of the slo-mo replay which makes every grab look a little sketchy. Think he’s OK here, though, and the umpire agrees. Out.
86th over: England 382-6 (Woakes 1, Stokes 56) Chris Woakes is up next and there’s still a lot of work to do: the lead is hardly enormous. Stokes takes a blow to the arm after failing to middle a pull shot off Henry. Ouch.
WICKET! Brook c Blundell b Henry 171 (England 381-6)
Sixth time lucky as New Zealand finally hold on! Brook tries to play that guide to third man again, but an outside edge travels into the hands of Tom Blundell.
85th over: England 381-5 (Brook 171, Stokes 56) Oh my days. Brook has sent Southee on to the roof, swatting away over the leg side for six. Then comes a delicate guide behind point for four. Get yourself a man who can do both.
Krishnamoorthy v asks a pertinent question: “What is the record for most dropped catches for one batsman. I do not recall 5 for a single player – this is qctually nuts.”
Don’t think Cricinfo have a list for this kind of stuff.
Half-century for Ben Stokes!
84th over: England 370-5 (Brook 160, Stokes 56) Ben Stokes has his first 50 since the summer, and he wants more: out comes a shimmy down the pitch and slap through the covers for four – off Matt Henry. Stokes and Brook have put on 51 in 10 overs today.
Harry Brook reaches 150!
83rd over: England 362-5 (Brook 159, Stokes 49) Brook moves to 152 with serious swagger, skipping down the pitch to thrash Southee through the off side for four. He then tries the scoop … but fails to make contact. The two batters exchange singles before Brook clips into the leg side for a couple. A leg-side swat from Brook to the ropes ends the over. The runs are flowing and these two are in a rush.
82nd over: England 350-5 (Brook 148, Stokes 48) Stokes doesn’t lace his cover drive off Matt Henry, nearly offering Williamson a catch but the ball drops just short. The left-hander looks a bit fidgety, trying to force things with the bat.
Guy Hornsby writes in:
Doesn’t Christchurch look like an absolutely beautiful place to watch cricket? Those panned back shots to games going on in the shadow of the ground are the best thing. Even better seeing girls playing. I went to those wonderful islands back in 2001, a truly great time it was, but late May wasn’t the time for Test cricket, sadly. Perhaps the Black Caps fielders feel like getting on the bus themselves, rather then shell yet another catch. They really are giving so many lives to England. But it’s new ball time, should be interesting!
81st over: England 350-5 (Brook 148, Stokes 48) Time for the second new ball, with England trailing by just one. Stokes skips down the pitch immediately, but doesn’t connect with Tim Southee’s inswinger. Stokes is dancing around his crease, making his intentions known: he wants to have a whack. He sneaks through a quick single before Brook does the same to produce a first-innings lead.
80th over: England 347-5 (Brook 147, Stokes 46) Stokes pulls Smith to claim a couple. TV replays show the five times Brook has been dropped in this innings – this is so unlike New Zealand.
79th over: England 340-5 (Brook 147, Stokes 41) O’Rourke gets the ball to thud into Brook’s front pad, though it’s high and probably sliding down leg as well. A bumper follows and the six-foot-very-tall quick is still causing the guy on 147* problems … and then another drop! Brook looks up to the skies and smiles. He slashed outside off, it went to Glenn Phillips at gully, and it really should have been taken. Straight to him, but popped out.
78th over: England 340-5 (Brook 147, Stokes 41) Smith gets one to leap up towards the shoulder of Brook’s bat, but the ball keeps low as it bisects the slip cordon. Brook then crunches a drive through extra cover for four; England are quicky making their way towards a lead.
77th over: England 332-5 (Brook 140, Stokes 41) Stokes nails a cover drive off O’Rourke … but Kane Williamson pulls off a cracking dive to his right to collect before firing a throw at the striker’s end. The England captain is forced to turn back and launch himself to make his ground.
76th over: England 329-5 (Brook 138, Stokes 41) Nathan Smith, very impressive on day two, is in from the other end. Brook is quick into his work, though, driving through point for his first boundary of the morning. Then comes the immaculate forward defence, quite possibly my favourite shot of his (a bit boring, I know). I reckon he could thrive at No 3.
75th over: England 324-5 (Brook 133, Stokes 41) Will O’Rourke opens up, with six overs remaining until the second new ball is available. Brook is on strike and quickly off it, tucking behind square on the leg side for one. Stokes throws the bat at a wide one but only connects with the air; he leaves the next one well alone. I wonder if he’s keen for a thrash before the new ball? He nails a pull shot for four to bring up a century stand.
Ben Stokes and Harry Brook, all smiles, make their way out to the middle. Let’s get going.
“Morning from a wet Auckland,” writes Chris Pitts. “Assuming England can push on this morning, what would be a lead?”
England would probably be very chuffed to get to 450, get themselves a 100-run lead? Considering where they were at lunch yesterday, any lead feels a fine achievement.
TalkSport, providing radio comms on this series, have had their cameras nicked!
William Lane writes in, offering some herbal wisdom:
Sorry to hear you’re under the weather.
Can’t go wrong with classic lemon lemsip, but I like to make my own lemon and ginger mix on the hob to stir the powdered stuff into. Tablespoon of honey in there too and you’re onto a winner.
Not much to say on the cricket itself to be honest, it’s all a bit “classic England” isn’t it? Ride our luck to be in touching distance of the first innings score with a few wickets in hand, collapse, concede a sizeable 3rd innings score before an all-time great chase in the fourth innings. Yawn….
Mark Quinn’s having a lovely time. As I crank up my electric heater, the jealousy grows. “Longterm reader first time writer… Just thought I’d drop you a line as we’re on holidays in Christchurch. Watching test cricket barefoot sat on a grass bank was a real joy, and to top it off, it was a cracking day yesterday. The first session looked tricky yesterday but would be fantastic for Stokes to get a century in his birthplace…”
Elsewhere in the Test game, there’s this mad scorecard. Aside from the obvious ‘Sri Lanka, what you doing?!?!?’, it’s worth noting that Temba Bavuma, a fine player who struggles to convert his fifties, has got his third Test ton.
Where does Ollie Pope want Ollie Pope to bat? He’s made it pretty clear, despite an impressive knock at No 6 on day two.
Preamble
New Zealand, England, the Hagley Oval, day three and it could end up being a tight game. This is how you do a Friday night, right?
The hosts had a bit of a stinker in the field yesterday, dropping several catches, and Harry Brook took advantage to post his seventh Test hundred and sixth away from home, which is just a bit ridiculous. He remains unbeaten on 132, with Ben Stokes, searching for form, alongside him on 37. England trail by 29, with five wickets still in the bag.
Feel free to drop me a line with your thoughts, queries, views on where Ollie Pope should bat, favourite Lemsip flavour (I’m feeling a bit meh), whatever makes you happy.