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To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, 'A fine knock' - Nicholls brings up his 100 By Stephan Shemilt Cricket Correspondent at The Kia Oval Published 19 June 2026, 18:35 BST Updated 2 minutes ago Second Rothesay Test, The Kia Oval (day three of five) New Zealand 391 (Phillips 100, Blundell 51; Bethell 3-26) & 252-3 (Nicholls 119*, Ravindra 76) England 291 (Gay 53, Fisher 50*; Henry 5-80) New Zealand are 352 runs ahead Scorecard England's parlous position in the second Test against New Zealand was compounded by drops from debutant wicketkeeper James Rew and a superb century by Henry Nicholls. On the day Ben Stokes made his return to action for Durham following an incident in a London nightclub, an England team without their captain were slowly roasted in the heat of The Oval. By the end of the third day, New Zealand had moved to 252-3 in their second innings, leading by 352 and primed to level the series at 1-1. Rew was one of five changes and three new caps brought in by England from the team that won the first Test at Lord's. The chances he missed were difficult, yet catchable and costly. Diving to his left, Rew put down Rachin Ravindra when he had only seven. Nicholls, on 42, gloved an attempted hook down the leg side and Rew parried the ball high to his right. Reprieved, the New Zealand third-wicket pair added 161. Ravindra was lbw to Jacob Bethell for 76, but Nicholls pushed on to end the day on 119 not out. England earlier gave up a first-innings lead of 100 by being bowled out for 291. It was a below-par total on a good pitch and would have been worse had it not been for number nine Matthew Fisher's maiden unbeaten half-century. From 222-6 overnight, the home side were reduced to 238-9 by Matt Henry's five-wicket haul, before Fisher added 53 for the 10th wicket with last man Sonny Baker. Durham chief 'bemused' by doubts around Stokes Published 39 minutes ago Stokes absence casts long shadow To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. This video can not be played Figure caption, Henry gets Root and Brook on his way to five-wicket haul Despite The Oval shimmering in the sunshine, this was an odd spectacle. New Zealand's dominance sucked the jeopardy from the contest, giving the feeling the real story was 280 miles away with Stokes, and Durham's match against Northamptonshire. There is a growing possibility Stokes and pace bowler Gus Atkinson will return for next week's third Test at Trent Bridge, and this third day was a further example of how England have missed their captain as a leader and cricketer. Denied the team balance provided by Stokes, England opted to go without a frontline spinner. One would have been useful on a pitch starting to turn and with a fast-bowling attack that had to be managed in the heat. Stand-in captain Joe Root's tactics were baffling on a second morning that began England's spiral. He is marshalling an inexperienced team
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