NAPIER (New Zealand), March 24: England’s Andrew Strauss and Ian Bell scored centuries to lead their side to a massive 501-run lead and all but end New Zealand’s chances of winning the deciding third Test on Monday.

Strauss, who had not scored a hundred in his last 30 Test innings, was on his highest Test score of 173 not out and Bell made 110 to guide the tourists to 416 for five at the close on the third day.

In this series-deciding third and final encounter New Zealand will again face a world record fourth innings target after being asked to chase 438 in the second Test in Wellington and falling 126 runs short.

New Zealand won the first Test in Hamilton by 189 runs.

The hosts have scored in excess of 400 only twice before when batting fourth, both times against England but they lost on each occasion. Their highest successful run chase was 324 for five against Pakistan at Christchurch in 1993-94.

Tim Ambrose was the other not out batsman on 28. Daniel Vettori was the most successful New Zealand bowler with three for 135.

The England batsmen applied themselves throughout the day on the batter friendly pitch and demonstrated how easy it could be to accumulate runs in the near-perfect conditions. They scored 325 runs in 90 overs for the loss of three wickets.

New Zealand were bowled out for 168 inside 50 overs on the second day, with Ryan Sidebottom taking a career-best seven for 47, after the hosts had reached 103 for one.

Strauss, who was handed a lifeline by being selected for this England squad after missing the previous series against Sri Lanka, had failed to excite in his early outings in New Zealand.

In his first five Test innings he only averaged 19.4, before coming right to produce his 11th Test century and first in 16 Tests.

Bell scored his seventh Test hundred ending a 12-match lull.

England resumed the day at 91 for two and the only wicket to fall in the first session was first innings centurion Kevin Pietersen who was neatly caught by Ross Taylor at slip.

Pietersen went to turn Daniel Vettori down the leg side only to have the ball deflect off the back of the bat for Taylor to pick up diving to his right.

Strauss, meanwhile, continued undaunted by his first innings duck and after arriving at the crease in the first over of England’s second innings with the early dismissal of captain Michael Vaughan.

The South African-born left-hander brought up his 50 driving Chris Martin straight to the boundary, and his century came slashing Martin for four.

He offered one chance when on 62 when he struck out at Vettori but the ball hit Matthew Bell in the chest at short leg and bounced out.

It was a rather sedate morning session for England when they scored just 76 runs, before adding 135 between lunch and tea and another 114 after tea.

Bell, who arrived at the wicket with Pietersen’s dismissal, went hunting runs from the start proving the wicket was batsman friendly despite New Zealand’s spectacular collapse when they lost nine wickets for 65 runs on the second day.

Unlike Strauss who took 225 deliveries to reach his century, Bell hooked Martin to the boundary to reach his milestone in 150 balls in an innings that included 16 fours and two sixes.

But his flamboyant knock came to a tame end when he half-heartedly drove Vettori straight to Mathew Sinclair at mid-off.

Vettori also removed Paul Collingwood for 22 with a straight forward caught and bowled leaving Tim Ambrose, unbeaten on 28, with Strauss at the close.

New Zealand captain Vettori was the only successful bowler on the day, taking all three wickets to fall and finishing with figures of three for 135 off 40 overs.

Scoreboard

ENGLAND (1st Innings) 253 (K.P. Pietersen 129; T.G. Southee 5-55).

NEW ZEALAND (1st Innings) 168 (S.P. Fleming 59; R.J. Sidebottom 7-47).

ENGLAND (2nd Innings, overnight 91-2):

A.N. Cook c McCullum b Patel 37

M.P. Vaughan c McCullum b Martin 4

A.J. Strauss not out 173

K.P. Pietersen c Taylor b Vettori 34

I.R. Bell c Sinclair b Vettori 110

P.D. Collingwood c and b Vettori 22

T.R. Ambrose not out 28

EXTRAS (LB-3, W-1, NB-4) 8

TOTAL (for five wkts, 122 overs) 416

FALL OF WKTS: 1-5, 2-77, 3-140, 4-327,

5-361.

BOWLING (to-date): Martin 18-2-60-1 (1w); Southee 24-5-84-0; Elliott 14-1-58-0; Vettori 40-6-135-3 (4nb); Patel 26-4-76-1.—Agencies

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