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Despite the absence of Kane Williamson, Tim Southee, Kyle Jamieson, and Mitchell Santner, New Zealand completely dominated in ꦿthe ongoing second Test against England at Edgbaston and are looking to win the contest alo♒ng with the series as the first match ended in🐲 a draw.
If the visitors manage to win the second and final game of the two-match leg, it will be the first Test series victory for New Zealand in England since 1999 – when the Kiwis won the 4-match leg under the leadership of legendary Stephen Fleming.
Coming back to the ongoing Test, the hosts have witnessed a collapse in batting and are reeling at 122/9 at stumps on the third day of the contest. England are only 37 runs ahead with tailenders Olly Stone (15 not out) and James Anderson (yet to score) in the middle.
Kiwi pacers Neil Wagner and Matt Henry destroyed the English batting in their second innings by picking up three wickets each. While Wagner dismissed the likes of Ollie Pope (23), Dan Lawrence (0), and Mark Wood (29), Henry removed the top three batters, Rory Burns (0), Dominic Sibley (8) and Zak Crawley (17).
Apart from the pace duo, spinner Ajaz Patel also joined the party, bagging a couple of scalps to trouble the home team further. First, Patel cleaned up wicketkeeper-batsman James Bracey for 8 runs and then he picked up the prized scalp of England skipper Joe Root for 11 runs.
Earlier, the tourists scored 388 in 119.1 overs, courtesy of remarkable half-centuries by Devon Conway, Ross Taylor and Will Young. While Taylor and Conway scored 80 runs each,๊ Young contributed with 8🌺2 runs.
Here is how Twitter reacted:
Stumps in Edgbaston!
New Zealand꧃ are in control after reducing England to🎶 122/9, a lead of 37, in their second innings.
Matt Henry and Neil Wagnerജ took three wickets apiece 👏 |
— ICC (@ICC)
The top order is the foundation of a side without which you don't build a structure. England's top three just don't do that. They seem to be doing just enough to keep their place which is a worry for them.
— Harsha Bhogle (@bhogleharsha)
Neil Wagner is an abso🧜lute beast, he has slide and saved 3 or 4 boundaries in this innings near the rope and gets a wicket in the second over.
— Johns. (@CricCrazyJohns)
Shocking to me that no one in NZ 💞TV has given Neil Wagner his own home improvement show where he pusheඣs the professionals out the way to fix things.
— Jarrod Kimber (@ajarrodkimber)
//twitter.com/sp♋arknzsport/status/14🧸03773754472165384
It’s ~22 years (7,966 days) since won a test seriesꦆ in 🏴✱
It’s ~7 yea♕rs (2,546 days) since 🅰🏴 lost a home test series
Wil🔴l tomorrow be the day these streaks are broken?
The ’s bowlers’ sensational performance on a flat pitch ha✱ve set things up perfectly.
— Michael Appleton (@michelappleton)
Devon Conway 80
Will Young 82
Ross Taylor 80The first time ever, three consecutive playe💙rs in batting order ended with scores in the eighties in international cricket.
— Kausthub Gudipati (@kaustats)
NꦺZ bowling attack showing its class. Henry picked 3 wickets so far. Not sure if he can play ahead of Jamieson in 🌱the WTC Final. Boult, Southee, Jamieson, Wagner, Henry: great pace attack. India too has potential pace attack. Cant wait for the
— Sarang Bhalerao (@bhaleraosarang)
England's plan B for saving this Test was to name a T20 squad during the lunch break.
— Andrew (@shortflyslip)
Wor𝕴st ba▨tting average for an England No. 7 in a Test series (minimum 3 innings):
1.00 – William Scotton vs AUS, 1886/87
1.00 – David Capel vs PAK, 1987/88
2.33 – Godfrey Evans vs RSA, 1951
2.66 – James Bracey vs NZ, 2021
4.00 – Peter Willey vs WI, 1985/86— Nic Savage (@nic_savage1)