NEW ZEALAND 1st innings 350 (L. Ronchi 88, T. Latham 84; S. Broad 5-109)

England 1st innings 350 (A. Lyth 107, A. Cook 75; T. Southee 4-83) NEW ZEALAND 2nd innings (o/n: 338-6)
T. Latham c Buttler b Broad 3
M. Guptill c Root b Wood 70
K. Williamson c Buttler b Broad 6
R. Taylor c Stokes b Wood 48
B. McCullum lbw b Wood 55
B. Watling c Root b Anderson 120
L. Ronchi c Buttler b Anderson 31
M. Craig not out 58
T. Southee c Anderson b Ali 40
M. Henry not out 12
Extras: (b-4, lb-6, w-1) 11
Total: (for 8 wickets decl’d, 91 overs) 454
Fall of wickets: 1-15, 2-23, 3-122, 4-141, 5-262, 6-315, 7-368, 8-435.
Bowling: J. Anderson 23-4-96-2 (w-1), S. Broad 16-1-94-2, M. Wood 19-2-97-3, B. Stokes 12-1-61-0, M. Ali 16-0-73-1, J. Root 5-0-23-0.
ENGLAND 2nd innings (Target: 455 runs)
A. Lyth not out 24
A. Cook not out 18
Extras: (lb-1, w-1) 2
Total: (for no loss, 13 overs) 44
Fall of wickets: Nil.
Bowling: T. Boult 7-0-20-0, T. Southee 3-1-13-0 (w-1), M. Craig 1-0-1-0, M. Henry 2-0-9-0.
Rain holds up New Zealand victory bid

England chasing record 455 for victory

… Hosts 44-0 at the close on fourth day
By Ed Osmond

LEEDS, England (Reuters) – England, chasing 455 to pull off the highest successful run chase in Test history, were 44 for no loss when rain ended play on day four of the second and final match of the series against New Zealand yesterday.
Captain Alastair Cook was 18 not out with Adam Lyth unbeaten on 24 when the bad weather forced the players off four overs after lunch and play was abandoned three hours later.
New Zealand had declared their second innings on 454 for eight after an entertaining morning session.
Resuming on 338 for six, the touring side plundered 116 runs in 75 minutes to close in on a series-levelling victory.
BJ Watling was caught at third slip by Joe Root off James Anderson for 120 after becoming the first New Zealander to score a Test century at Headingley.
“I’m very proud to have achieved that,” Watling told a news conference. “I wasn’t really aware of it until I read it last night.
“We’ve still got 98 overs tomorrow to bowl them out and we are definitely backing ourselves. We have to concentrate on our skills, put the ball in the right areas and we can cause some problems.”
Mark Craig and Tim Southee added 67 runs off 53 balls before
Southee, on 40, hit spinner Moeen Ali straight to Anderson at long-off but Craig continued to flay England’s attack on the way to an unbeaten 58.
Stuart Broad conceded 20 runs off one over and the England fast bowler was hammered for three more sixes in the final over before the declaration.
The highest successful fourth-innings run chase in Tests was achieved by West Indies who made 418 for seven to beat Australia in Antigua in 2002-3.
“We’ve got quite a bit of work to do but we have the opportunity to do something special,” Root said.
“We’ve got every intention of winning the game and we feel very positive. The first hour will be important to set up the chase but it is still a good pitch and we need to come out with all guns blazing tomorrow.”
England won the first Test at Lord’s by 124 runs. (Editing by Tony Jimenez and Ken Ferris)

SHARE THIS ARTICLE :
Facebook
Twitter
WhatsApp
All our printed editions are available online
emblem3
Subscribe to the Guyana Chronicle.
Sign up to receive news and updates.
We respect your privacy.