England Fight Back in Third Test as Ben Duckett Hits Century Against New Zealand

Digital Desk

England Fight Back in Third Test as Ben Duckett Hits Century Against New Zealand

Ben Duckett's explosive 113 helped England recover to 223/2 after New Zealand posted 438 in the third Test at Trent Bridge. Joe Root and Jacob Bethell remain unbeaten.

 

England mounted an impressive response on Day 2 of the third Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge, finishing at 223 for 2 in their first innings after dismissing the visitors for 438 runs. Opener Ben Duckett starred with a rapid century before Joe Root and Jacob Bethell ensured England ended the day in a strong position.

New Zealand resumed their innings after a dominant opening-day performance and were eventually bowled out for 438. The visitors laid the foundation through an outstanding 317-run opening partnership, with captain Tom Latham scoring 151 and Devon Conway contributing 157. Their partnership put England under pressure early in the contest and marked one of New Zealand's best opening stands in Test cricket.

England, however, recovered quickly after an early setback in their reply.

The hosts lost opener Emilio Gay for a duck with just eight runs on the board. Gay faced five deliveries before edging a ball from Will O'Rourke to wicketkeeper Tom Blundell, giving New Zealand the ideal start.

Duckett then transformed the innings with an aggressive counterattack that shifted the momentum back in England's favour.

The left-handed opener reached his seventh Test century in just 88 balls, registering the second-fastest Test hundred by an England batter. The innings followed Duckett's reputation for attacking cricket and came after he had received an early reprieve on eight runs, a chance New Zealand failed to convert.

Duckett eventually fell for 113 off 98 deliveries, striking 18 boundaries before being bowled by Nathan Smith. His innings provided England with the platform they needed after the early loss and significantly reduced the pressure created by New Zealand's imposing first-innings total.

Following Duckett's dismissal, Jacob Bethell continued England's positive approach while showing greater patience. The young batter remained unbeaten on 74, displaying maturity in building the innings alongside experienced campaigner Joe Root, who ended the day unbeaten on 21.

Duckett and Bethell added a crucial 179-run partnership for the second wicket, ensuring England stayed firmly in the contest heading into Day 3.

New Zealand also suffered a setback in the field when fast bowler Blair Tickner was ruled out of the match after experiencing concussion symptoms. Tickner had earlier been struck on the helmet by a delivery from Jofra Archer while batting. Although he briefly returned to the field, he later reported nausea and was withdrawn under concussion protocols.

As a result, Jack Foulds was approved as Tickner's concussion replacement for the remainder of the Test.

Despite conceding a strong partnership, New Zealand still hold a first-innings advantage, while England will look to build on the solid platform provided by Duckett, Root and Bethell. With plenty of batting still to come and conditions remaining favourable, the third day's play is expected to play a decisive role in determining the direction of the Test match.

 

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27 Jun 2026 By Abhishek Joshi

England Fight Back in Third Test as Ben Duckett Hits Century Against New Zealand

Digital Desk

England mounted an impressive response on Day 2 of the third Test against New Zealand at Trent Bridge, finishing at 223 for 2 in their first innings after dismissing the visitors for 438 runs. Opener Ben Duckett starred with a rapid century before Joe Root and Jacob Bethell ensured England ended the day in a strong position.

New Zealand resumed their innings after a dominant opening-day performance and were eventually bowled out for 438. The visitors laid the foundation through an outstanding 317-run opening partnership, with captain Tom Latham scoring 151 and Devon Conway contributing 157. Their partnership put England under pressure early in the contest and marked one of New Zealand's best opening stands in Test cricket.

England, however, recovered quickly after an early setback in their reply.

The hosts lost opener Emilio Gay for a duck with just eight runs on the board. Gay faced five deliveries before edging a ball from Will O'Rourke to wicketkeeper Tom Blundell, giving New Zealand the ideal start.

Duckett then transformed the innings with an aggressive counterattack that shifted the momentum back in England's favour.

The left-handed opener reached his seventh Test century in just 88 balls, registering the second-fastest Test hundred by an England batter. The innings followed Duckett's reputation for attacking cricket and came after he had received an early reprieve on eight runs, a chance New Zealand failed to convert.

Duckett eventually fell for 113 off 98 deliveries, striking 18 boundaries before being bowled by Nathan Smith. His innings provided England with the platform they needed after the early loss and significantly reduced the pressure created by New Zealand's imposing first-innings total.

Following Duckett's dismissal, Jacob Bethell continued England's positive approach while showing greater patience. The young batter remained unbeaten on 74, displaying maturity in building the innings alongside experienced campaigner Joe Root, who ended the day unbeaten on 21.

Duckett and Bethell added a crucial 179-run partnership for the second wicket, ensuring England stayed firmly in the contest heading into Day 3.

New Zealand also suffered a setback in the field when fast bowler Blair Tickner was ruled out of the match after experiencing concussion symptoms. Tickner had earlier been struck on the helmet by a delivery from Jofra Archer while batting. Although he briefly returned to the field, he later reported nausea and was withdrawn under concussion protocols.

As a result, Jack Foulds was approved as Tickner's concussion replacement for the remainder of the Test.

Despite conceding a strong partnership, New Zealand still hold a first-innings advantage, while England will look to build on the solid platform provided by Duckett, Root and Bethell. With plenty of batting still to come and conditions remaining favourable, the third day's play is expected to play a decisive role in determining the direction of the Test match.

 

https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/sports/england-fight-back-in-third-test-as-ben-duckett-hits/article-20689

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