Duckett's Century and Stokes' Spell Haul England Back in Third Test
Quick Look
- England responded strongly on day two of the third Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge.
- Ben Duckett scored 113 and Jacob Bethell 74* as England closed on 223-2, trailing by 215 runs.
- Earlier, Ben Stokes took 4-70 to help dismiss New Zealand for 438.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
England are in a decisive third Test against New Zealand, having endured a torrid eight months with poor results. The team is trying to avoid scrutiny on managerial positions with a win.
Third Rothesay Test, Trent Bridge (day two of five)
New Zealand 438: Conway 157, Latham 151; Stokes 4-70
England 223-2: Duckett 113, Bethell 74*
England are 215 runs behind
Scorecard
Ben Duckett's scintillating century built on an inspirational bowling spell from Ben Stokes to haul England back into the decisive third Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge.
In a remarkable turnaround from the Black Caps reaching 317-0 at one stage on the opening day, England took all 10 wickets for 121 runs to dismiss the tourists for 438, then closed the second day on 223-2 - 215 behind.
Captain Stokes, back in the side after the nightclub controversy that led him to miss the second Test, was the catalyst with a typically tireless stint in the sweltering heat.
After England failed to make a breakthrough in the first 40 minutes, Stokes' eight overs yielded three wickets and a dropped catch.
Shoaib Bashir took two in an over and Jofra Archer one, as well as striking Blair Tickner with a blow that eventually ruled the seamer out of the match with concussion. Overall, from their overnight 361-4, New Zealand lost six wickets for 77 runs on Friday.
Given the conditions and the flat pitch it was a superb effort from England, who set about cutting the deficit despite the loss of Emilio Gay for a duck.
With the support of Jacob Bethell, Duckett took advantage of being dropped on eight to register his first Test hundred since last June.
New Zealand were almost powerless to prevent England's rapid progress, as the second-wicket pair added 179.
Duckett was eventually out for 113, leaving Bethell to move to an unbeaten 74 - his first half-century at home and in the first innings of a Test. Joe Root, at one of his most fruitful venues, reached 21 not out.
England have endured a torrid eight months. If this series decider goes against them, it will rekindle scrutiny on those in managerial positions.
Given their poor run of results - two wins in nine - and faced with the task of dislodging the Kiwis on the road-like pitch and in extreme temperatures, England could have crumbled.
That they hung in this game - first with two wickets with the final two balls of day one, then by dominating the second day - is to their immense credit.
The home side are still a long way behind, so have plenty of work to do with the bat, but it could be argued England have the best chance of forcing a win simply because they have the earliest opportunity to take 20 wickets.
They have history on this ground and against these opponents, with this match plotting a similar course to England's memorable win in 2022, achieved despite New Zealand posting 553 in their first innings.
That was the Test that ignited England's Bazball philosophy. Another win here may ease the pressure on the leadership, at least temporarily.
How England missed Stokes as a leader and cricketer at The Oval. The captain was their best seamer on day one in Nottingham and this situation - a game in the balance - was made for the talisman.
Nightwatchman O'Rourke frustrated England for his 19 and was put down by wicketkeeper Jamie Smith in Stokes' first over. In Stokes' next, Daryl Mitchell was adjudged to have edged behind on review, though the batter thought he hit his pad.
Stokes enticed O'Rourke to miscue and then came a moment of controversy.
Santner ducked into a Stokes short ball and was given out, caught at gully. Santner was convinced the ball hit his armguard, but Stokes pointed to the strap of the batter's glove - in the Laws enough for him to be given out - and the third umpire agreed. It left Stokes with 4-70.
Stokes withdrew himself at lunch, employing Archer and the off-spin of Bashir. Bashir was slow to move for a chance at deep square leg off Tom Blundell, though he made amends in his next over by holding Smith in his follow-through then having the reverse-sweeping Blundell leg before.
Archer's blow to Tickner was nasty, with the consequences revealed later, then last man Ben Sears was lbw. England took the last 10 wickets in 42.5 overs.
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
England to push for a lead on day three.
Likely · Within days
Open Questions
- Can England maintain their momentum on day three?
- Will New Zealand's bowlers find a way through England's batting lineup?





