England with work to do after New Zealand defiance

England with work to do after New Zealand defiance
_128755088_leach.jpgAll three wickets England took in the second innings fell to spin, with Jack Leach toiling away for 31 oversEngland 435-8 dec (Brook 186, Root 153*; Henry 4-100)New Zealand 209 (Southee 73, Broad 4-61) & 202-3 (Latham 83, Conway 61)New Zealand trail by 24 runsScorecard

England have work to do in order to win the second Test after New Zealand's defiance following-on in Wellington.

The home side ended day three on 202-3, 24 behind after beginning their second innings 226 adrift.

Tom Latham made 83 and Devon Conway 61 in an opening stand of 149, before New Zealand lost three wickets for 18 runs to the spin of Jack Leach and Joe Root.

But Kane Williamson and Henry Nicholls dug in, at times painstakingly so. Williamson crawled to 25 not out from 81 balls and Nicholls 18 from 70 in an unbroken partnership of 35.

Captain Tim Southee earlier clubbed 73 from 49 balls to drag the Black Caps to 209 all out in their first innings.

Southee added 98 for the eighth wicket with Tom Blundell, only for both to fall to Stuart Broad as part of his 4-61.

Then came the New Zealand rearguard, leaving a match that could have been one-sided delicately poised.

To enforce or not to enforce?

_128755095_stokes.jpgBen Stokes enforced the follow-on after England quickly wrapped up New Zealand's first innings on the third morning

A decision made by a captain to enforce a follow-on or declare (which England did in their innings) is only ever judged in hindsight.

When Ben Stokes opted to use the follow-on - the first time he has had the opportunity under his captaincy and the first enforced by England since August 2020 - it was incredibly hard to argue.

That New Zealand subsequently batted well does mean it was a bad call.

Indeed, the fact the Basin Reserve pitch is staying true to its reputation for getting better for batting - it is gradually turning from green to brown - means England could have the best of it when they come to a run-chase.

The hosts' grit will not have come as a surprise to England and, for the first time in the series, the Black Caps looked like the reigning world Test champions.

England are still favourites to win this match. They will return refreshed on Monday with a ball that is only three overs old looking to make inroads and limit their eventual target.

But New Zealand have also given themselves an outside chance of saving the series by becoming the first team to win a Test against England after following on.

Latham and Conway lead New Zealand rearguard

Faced with such a huge deficit, left-handed openers Latham and Conway gradually chipped away at England's advantage with old-fashioned Test values: patience, determination and sound judgement.

Both men left well. Latham was strong off the pads, Conway drove handsomely through the covers and also hit Leach for six over long-on.

An incredibly sharp chance back to Leach off Latham was the closest England came until Ollie Pope once again showed his value as a close fielder by holding on to Conway's inside edge.

Three overs later, Latham missed a sweep to be lbw to Root and when Leach produced a ripper that turned past Will Young's defensive stroke, New Zealand were three down still 59 adrift.

But Williamson and Nicholls dropped anchor with dead-batted defence. Nicholls survived an inside edge flashing past Pope at short leg when he had eight.

The brief burst with the second new ball could not part them and New Zealand have the likes Daryl Mitchell, Blundell, Michael Bracewell and Southee still to come on Monday.

Southee chaos precedes Kiwi defiance

_128755281_southee.jpgTim Southee hit six sixes in his entertaining knock

England might have been hoping for victory inside three days when play resumed with New Zealand 138-7, 237 behind.

On a grey morning, Southee caused chaos. From 23 not out, he swiped 50 from the 30 balls he faced until his dismissal. Three sixes were belted off a single Leach over, another maximum pulled off Ollie Robinson.

He was put down by Leach - a skier at fine leg - but next ball chipped Broad to Zak Crawley at mid-wicket.

In Broad's next over, Tom Blundell hammered to mid-on and was out for 38, then Matt Henry looped a short ball to point.

After bowling only 11.2 overs, England invited the Black Caps to bat again, only to encounter some hard toil in the warmest weather of the match.

England's pace bowlers got the ball to swing, but bowled a touch too wide to utilise the assistance. There was turn for the spinners, albeit with Leach erring on the short side.

Stokes held himself back until the 50th over and sent down two overs of ineffective bouncers, including a wide and three no-balls, before Leach found the breakthrough.

'You're going to have days of hard toil'

England assistant coach Paul Collingwood, speaking to BT Sport: "They've fought really hard today, I think it's been an enthralling day of Test cricket.

"We know as an England cricket team that you're going to have days like this where it is hard toil. New Zealand have fought hard.

"But it's had everything today, we had a counter-attack from Southee this morning then we went out there and had a great time with the new ball, just unfortunately didn't get the wickets with Jimmy and Broady up top.

"They fought hard but we're in a good position still."

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