All-round Broad show lifts England in final NZ Test

Published June 1, 2015
LEEDS: England paceman Stuart Broad celebrates after dismissing New Zealand batsman Kane Williamson during the second Test at Headingley on Sunday.—AP
LEEDS: England paceman Stuart Broad celebrates after dismissing New Zealand batsman Kane Williamson during the second Test at Headingley on Sunday.—AP

LEEDS: Stuart Broad starred with both bat and ball before Mark Wood took two wickets to give England the edge in a see-saw second Test against New Zealand at Headingley on Sunday.

Broad ensured first innings parity for England on the third day and then reduced New Zealand to 23 for two in their second innings.

But in what is now typical New Zealand style, Martin Guptill (70) and Ross Taylor (48) added 99 in 87 balls for the third wicket.

However, both well-set batsmen fell in quick succession to Durham paceman Wood.

At tea, New Zealand were 143 for four, a lead of 143, in a match they had to win to level the two-Test series at 1-1 after their 124-run defeat at Lord’s.

New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum was eight not out and BJ Watling two not out.

Broad’s 46, his highest Test score since he made 47 against India at Trent Bridge last year, helped England make 350 — the same total as New Zealand posted in their first innings.

He then took two wickets for four runs in 12 balls, with Tom Latham (three) and Kane Williamson (six) both caught behind.

Taylor should have been out for six when he edged an intended drive off James Anderson.

But, not for the first time this series, England dropped a slip catch, with third slip Gary Ballance failing to hold the chance above his head.

Taylor cashed in with several fine shots, including pulling Ben Stokes’s opening long hop for six.

Meanwhile opener Guptill, one of the stars of New Zealand’s run to the World Cup final, drove off-spinner Moeen Ali for six to complete a fine fifty.

But the pendulum swung back in England’s favour when Taylor chipped the first ball of Wood’s second spell to Stokes at extra-cover for an all-Durham dismissal.

Wood was again rewarded for pitching the ball up when Guptill’s intended drive flew quickly to Joe Root, who held a sharp catch at third slip to end a 72-ball innings including seven fours and a six.

Earlier, England resumed on 253 for five only to see their middle order fall cheaply as Tim Southee took three wickets for six runs in 17 balls.

But Broad led a tail-end revival that saw England’s last two wickets add a valuable 83 runs.

The struggling Ian Bell had failed to add to his overnight 12 not out when he was drawn into driving loosely at a Southee outswinger and edged low to Mark Craig at second slip.

Things might have been different for England had Broad, then on nine, not been dropped in the deep by Watling.

Instead Broad, who has a Test hundred to his credit against Pakistan in 2006 but whose batting has suffered since he was hit on the head by India’s Varun Aaron last year, continued to attack.

Off-spinner Craig had Wood, who made a useful 19, edging an intended cut to wicket-keeper Luke Ronchi.

Broad hooked Matt Henry for six before he was bowled by the fast bowler to end a 39-ball knock that also included five fours.

Late on Saturday, Boult and Southee led a New Zealand recovery after Adam Lyth scored his maiden Test century and Alastair Cook became England’s all-time leading Test run-scorer.

England were cruising on the second day of the second Test while left-handed openers Lyth (107) and skipper Cook (75) were sharing a first-wicket stand of 177.

But the departure of Lyth, needlessly run out shortly before the advent of the new ball, sparked a slump that saw four wickets fall late in the day.

The new ball saw Boult take two wickets for 10 runs in four overs and Southee one for seven, also in four overs.

Lyth had managed just seven and 12 on debut during England’s 124-run win in the first of this two-Test series at Lord’s. But he was far more assured back in familiar surroundings, although he did have several ‘nervous nineties’ moments.

On 90, he almost played on to Southee, kicking fresh air while ball hit the stumps but didn’t dislodge either bail.

Lyth was on 94 when his drive against off-spinner Mark Craig appeared destined for mid-on.

But substitute fielder Neil Wagner went the wrong way as the ball flew past him for a four that took Lyth to 98.

Two balls later, Lyth had his century when a slog-swept boundary off Craig saw him completed a 188-ball hundred, including 14 fours.

Scoreboard

NEW ZEALAND (1st Innings) 350 (L. Ronchi 88, T.W.M. Latham 84; S.C.J. Broad 5-109)

ENGLAND (1st Innings, overnight 253-5):

A. Lyth run out 107

A.N. Cook lbw b Craig 75

G.S. Ballance b Boult 29

I.R. Bell c Craig b Southee 12

J.E. Root c Ronchi b Southee 1

B.A. Stokes c Craig b Boult 6

J.C. Buttler c Taylor b Southee 10

Moeen Ali c Guptill b Southee 1

S.C.J. Broad b Henry 46

M.A. Wood c Ronchi b Craig 19

J.M. Anderson not out 10

EXTRAS (B-19, LB-5, W-5, NB-5) 34

TOTAL (all out, 108.2 overs) 350

FALL OF WKTS: 1-177, 2-215, 3-238, 4-239, 5-247, 6-257, 7-266, 8-267, 9-318.

BOWLING: Boult 30-7-98-2 (5nb, 1w); Southee 30-5-83-4 (2w); Henry 20.2-4-92-1 (2w); Craig 26-12-48-2; Williamson 2-1-5-0.

NEW ZEALAND (2nd Innings):

T.W.M. Latham c Buttler b Broad 3

M.J. Guptill c Root b Wood 70

K.S. Williamson c Buttler b Broad 6

L.R.P.L. Taylor c Stokes b Wood 48

B.B. McCullum not out 8

B.J. Watling not out 2

EXTRAS (LB-6) 6

TOTAL (for four wkts, 30 overs) 143

FALL OF WKTS: 1-15, 2-23, 3-122, 4-141.

BOWLING: Anderson 8-3-32-0; Broad 7-1-35-2; Wood 6-1-28-2; Stokes 6-0-26-0; Moeen Ali 3-0-16-0.

Published in Dawn, June 1st, 2015

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