New Zealand squanders strong starts as England’s green attack strikes at The Oval

On the opening day of the third and decisive Test match between New Zealand and England at The Oval, the Black Caps capped their most productive batting session of the ongoing England tour with a frustratingly underwhelming result, ending Wednesday at 291 for seven wickets after squandering multiple promising starts against a drastically inexperienced English bowling attack.

England entered the clash holding a 1-0 series lead, having secured an 115-run victory in the opening Test at Lord’s. That result came under intense scrutiny after match officials rated the Lord’s pitch “unsatisfactory”, and the psychological impact of that win appeared to linger in New Zealand’s batting performance Wednesday. On a pitch that shed its early hostile, fast-bowling friendly conditions as the day progressed — matching pre-match expectations — six of the Black Caps’ seven wickets came courtesy of soft, unforced dismissals that gifted the underprepared English side easy breakthroughs.

The casualty list of wasted starts reads like a who’s who of New Zealand’s batting core: captain Tom Latham, Henry Nicholls, who stepped into the key number three batting slot vacated by retired former skipper Kane Williamson, all-rounder Rachin Ravindra, and wicketkeeper-batter Tom Blundell — the first New Zealand batter to register a half-century in this series — all threw away solid foundations after getting set at the crease.

By the close of play, only Glenn Phillips remained unbeaten on 49, alongside fast bowler Kyle Jamieson who had notched six runs. The final hour of the day delivered the most dramatic action of the opening session, with star England fast bowler Jofra Archer delivering a relentless, probing spell to test Phillips that had crowds on the edge of their seats.

England’s bowling unit, which took the field at Lord’s for the first Test, has been decimated by a combination of player suspensions and injury ahead of the Oval clash. That left Archer — playing his first Test match since the Christmas break last year — to lead a vastly inexperienced group: Josh Tongue, Matthew Fisher (playing just his second Test at international level), and Sonny Baker, one of three debutants named in England’s bowling line-up.

Against expectations, the young group performed far better than many pundits predicted, consistently delivering fast, line-and-length bowling that kept New Zealand batters under pressure. That said, wayward bowling that resulted in 44 extras meant the free gifts from New Zealand’s batters were matched by England’s unforced errors, with the 44 extras tying for the third highest individual score on New Zealand’s innings card at stumps.

Even part-time spinner Jacob Bethell got in on the action, delivering the first spin bowling of the entire series for England and claiming an eye-catching two wickets for just eight runs from his five overs, further highlighting New Zealand’s generous dismissal rate. Baker, the lively young fast bowler, claimed the wicket of Ravindra, while both Archer and seamers Dom Mitchell chipped in with one wicket apiece. Archer’s final eight-over spell of the day, which conceded just 22 runs without taking a wicket, delivered the high-tempo, high-stakes drama that woke a dozing packed crowd and gave the home side momentum heading into Day Two.