
The second Test match between England and New Zealand at The Oval, which commenced on June 17, 2026, has reached a fascinating juncture. After two days of intense red-ball action in London, the visitors have firmly established a baseline of control. Driven by individual brilliance with the bat and collective discipline with the ball, the New Zealand tour of England is shaping up to be an absolute classic, leaving the hosts with an uphill task as the match progresses.
Glenn Phillips’ superb hundred puts New Zealand slightly ahead of England at the end of Day 2
Resuming Day 2 on an overnight score of 291/7, New Zealand’s primary objective was to stretch their first-innings total past the 350-mark. Middle-order dynamic batter Glenn Phillips, who finished Day 1 agonizingly close to a milestone at 49*, played a magnificent counter-attacking knock to push the Blackcaps into a position of strength. Alongside Kyle Jamieson, who contributed a handy 41 off 48 deliveries, Phillips anchored an important eighth-wicket partnership that yielded 50 quick runs in just 52 balls.
Phillips accelerated beautifully, bringing up a spectacular century off just 135 balls, a knock laced with 18 crisp boundaries. He was eventually the last man dismissed for exactly 100, caught by Emilio Gay off the bowling of Matthew Fisher. Benefiting from a massive total of 53 extras conceded by the English bowlers, New Zealand’s first innings wrapped up at 391 in 96.2 overs. For England, debutant spinner Jacob Bethell was the surprise pick of the bowlers, returning highly impressive figures of 3/26 from his 10 overs, while Fisher claimed 2/62 to clean up the tail.
Also READ: Fans go wild as Glenn Phillips hits maiden century on Day 2 of the Oval Test – ENG vs NZ
Disciplined New Zealand bowling halts England’s fightback on Day 2
Faced with a daunting first-innings total, England’s response began briskly but was repeatedly derailed by a relentless, disciplined New Zealand bowling attack. Openers Ben Duckett and Emilio Gay looked set, racing to 45 before Duckett was run out for 36 off 25 balls by a sharp piece of fielding from Nathan Smith. Bethell could not replicate his bowling success with the bat, falling for just 9 to Smith.
Gay compiled a gritty, patient half-century, scoring 53 off 114 balls, and alongside captain Joe Root, stabilized the innings with a 54-run partnership. However, New Zealand used the Decision Review System (DRS) perfectly to overturn a decision and dismiss Gay caught behind off Will O’Rourke. Root looked dangerous for his 46, but his dismissal, an lbw to Matt Henry upheld via umpire’s call, sparked a mini-collapse.
Henry struck again immediately, removing the dangerous Harry Brook for 24, trapping him lbw to leave England reeling. O’Rourke then returned to remove young wicketkeeper James Rew for 24. By the time stumps were drawn on Day 2, England had laboured to 222/6 after 59 overs, with Jordan Cox unbeaten on 22 and Jofra Archer on 0. Scoring at a crawling rate of just 1.80 runs per over in the final 10 overs of the day, England still trail by 169 runs, giving New Zealand a distinct, narrow advantage heading into Day 3.
Day 2, Stumps
New Zealand gets six wickets across the last two sessions to tighten their grip on the contest as England trail by 169 runs 🏏#ENGvNZ #Cricket pic.twitter.com/WxBXtw2wug
— CricketTimes.com (@CricketTimesHQ) June 19, 2026
Also WATCH: Jacob Bethell takes a sensational flying catch to dismiss Tom Latham on Day 1 of the second Test
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