
England produced a remarkable turnaround on the second day of the third Test at Trent Bridge, bouncing back from New Zealand‘s dominant opening-day display with a spirited bowling effort before Ben Duckett‘s attacking century put the hosts firmly back in contention. After conceding a mammoth 317-run opening stand on Day 1, England dismissed the visitors for 438 and then raced to 223/2 at stumps, trailing by just 215 runs with eight wickets still in hand.
Ben Stokes inspires collapse after New Zealand’s commanding start
New Zealand resumed on a commanding 361/4 and appeared well placed to push beyond the 500-run mark. However, England captain Ben Stokes produced a decisive spell that completely shifted the momentum of the contest. Stokes extracted movement from the surface with disciplined seam bowling and struck at crucial moments. Daryl Mitchell was the first to fall after edging behind, with the decision overturned on review. Nightwatchman William O’Rourke frustrated England briefly but eventually holed out, giving Stokes his second wicket of the morning.
The England skipper then dismissed Mitchell Santner in controversial fashion. Santner reviewed the decision, believing the ball had brushed his arm guard rather than his glove, but the television umpire ruled that there had been glove contact, forcing the all-rounder to depart. The wicket also marked a personal milestone for Stokes as he became only the ninth England bowler to claim 250 Test wickets.
Tom Blundell and Nathan Smith steadied the innings before lunch, but England tightened their grip in the afternoon session. Shoaib Bashir made amends for an earlier dropped chance by removing Smith and later trapping Blundell lbw. Jofra Archer wrapped up the innings by dismissing Ben Sears as New Zealand lost their remaining six wickets for just 121 runs.
Despite magnificent centuries from Devon Conway (157) and Tom Latham (151), New Zealand were left wondering how they failed to convert such a commanding position into an even bigger total.
Ben Duckett punishes New Zealand’s missed opportunities
England’s reply began aggressively despite losing debutant Emilio Gay for a duck. The defining moment arrived when Duckett, on just eight runs, was dropped by Henry Nicholls at third slip.
The reprieve proved extremely costly. Duckett immediately seized control, punishing anything overpitched or wide as New Zealand’s seamers struggled for consistency. His fluent strokeplay allowed Jacob Bethell to settle comfortably at the other end while England maintained an impressive scoring rate throughout the innings.
Duckett reached his half-century from only 40 deliveries and continued to dominate every bowler. Santner failed to find any rhythm, regularly offering scoring opportunities with loose deliveries, while Ben Sears and the rest of the pace attack also struggled to build pressure. Bethell complemented Duckett superbly, bringing up his own half-century and registering the highest first-innings score of his young Test career.
Duckett eventually completed his seventh Test century from just 88 balls, celebrating passionately after ending a lean run in the format. His superb knock finally ended on 113 when he chopped the ball back onto his stumps, but by then England had firmly wrestled control of the day’s play.
England finish strongly despite late slowdown
New Zealand briefly managed to stem the flow of runs after Duckett’s dismissal. Zakary Foulkes, introduced as a concussion substitute after Blair Tickner was forced off following a blow to the helmet while batting, bowled with discipline and repeatedly tested Bethell outside off stump.
However, Bethell remained composed to finish unbeaten on 74, while the ever-reliable Joe Root closed the day unbeaten on 21. England ended Day 2 on 223/2, still 215 runs behind but with plenty of batting left and momentum firmly on their side after a dramatic reversal of fortunes.
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