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regular-article-logo Sunday, 22 December 2024

New Zealand batters fight back, Tim Southee shows way

Kane Williamson had scored only 10 runs in his three previous innings in the series and needed a big innings as much as New Zealand did

AP/PTI Wellington Published 27.02.23, 04:40 AM
New Zealand’s Tom Latham (right) and England wicketkeeper Ben Foakes during the third day’s play of the second Test in Wellington on Sunday.

New Zealand’s Tom Latham (right) and England wicketkeeper Ben Foakes during the third day’s play of the second Test in Wellington on Sunday. AP/PTI

Tim Southee sounded the rallying cry and Tom Latham and Devon Conway answered the call as New Zealand fought back after following on Sunday, the third day of the second cricket Test against England.

New Zealand trailed by 226 on the first innings and by stumps were 202/3, only 24 runs in deficit. At the close, Kane Williamson was on 25 and Henry Nicholls on 18, having seen New Zealand through most of the last session.

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Southee battered 73 runs from 49 balls with five fours and six sixes in the morning to show the first spark of defiance before New Zealand were dismissed for 209 in their first innings in reply to England’s 435/8.

New Zealand have been on the back foot for most of this Test, indeed most of the series. But they enjoyed a period on the offensive when Southee was at the crease in the morning. Southee resumed at 23 and reached his fifty from only 39 balls.

Latham and Conway then combined in a 149-run opening partnership which wiped out all but 77 runs of the deficit. Stokes may be taken to task for enforcing the follow-on, a tactic that is increasingly rare in cricket.

His bowlers already had bowled 53.2 overs in the New Zealand first innings in which the England quicks — James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Ollie Robinson — had shared 36.2 overs.

But Stokes likely had no other choice on a pitch which has lost most of its sting and likely will be ideal for batting on the final day.

The English bowlers, Broad especially, frequently beat the bat in the early stages of the New Zealand second innings.

But Latham and Conway showed application, which recently has been missing from New Zealand’s top order. New Zealand’s best opening partnership in the three previous innings in the series was 14: Sunday’s stand is now the highest second innings opening partnership ever at the Basin Reserve.

Latham grafted his way to his 26th Test half-century from 124 balls and Conway was slightly quicker, reaching his seventh fifty from 121 balls. On reaching 45, Latham became the seventh New Zealander to score 5,000 Test runs.

But Conway was out for 61, caught by Ollie Pope at short leg from the bowling of Jack Leach, and Latham followed soon after for 83, trapped lbw by Joe Root.

“I felt both of us (Latham and Conway) were slightly different. Dev struggled to get away a bit at the start but I managed to do most of the scoring,” Latham said. “The scoreboard was ticking over and we just managed to take it one over at a time and just keep asking them to come back.”

New Zealand found themselves under familiar pressure. Then came a man facing his own pressures: Kane Williamson had scored only 10 runs in his three previous innings in the series and needed a big innings as much as New Zealand did.

Williamson hung on for more than two hours until stumps and faced 81 ball to be not out on 25. He now needs only three runs on Monday to overtake Ross Taylor as New Zealand’s leading run-scorer in Tests.

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