James Anderson Tom Latham Devon Conway Britain New Zealand Wellington bowling fencing on James Anderson Tom Latham Devon Conway Britain New Zealand Wellington

NZ openers continue to thwart England after Stokes enforces follow-on

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:New Zealand openers Tom Latham and Devon Conway defied England's bowlers for an entire session as Ben Stokes's decision to enforce the follow-on paid no immediate dividends on day three of the second test in Wellington on Sunday.Latham and Conway each scored unbeaten half-centuries to push New Zealand to 128 for no loss in their second innings, still 98 runs short of making England bat again.Latham was 72 not out, with fellow lefthander Conway on 53, the pair's resilience warmly welcomed by most fans in the sold-out crowd after two days of English domination.

New Zealand were bowled out in the morning session for 209 in reply to England's declared first innings total of 435 for eight, the Black Caps falling 27 runs short of avoiding the follow-on.Stokes had little hesitation sending the hosts back in to bat on an overcast morning but Latham and Conway survived 19 watchful overs to lunch.Resuming on 40 for no loss after the break, the openers' resistance began to frustrate England's bowlers who had become accustomed to wickets falling regularly and cheaply this series.Latham brought up his 5,000th test run as he moved to 45 with a single off James Anderson.He had 10 fours to his name at tea, pulling and hooking with aplomb against the English quicks' short-pitched bowling.Conway also grew in confidence, smashing a six and a four to give home fans hope of England having a fourth innings chase.While plenty of balls beat the bat, there was only one half-chance when spinner Jack Leach got fingers to Latham's smashed return catch just above the pitch.New Zealand started the day on 138 for seven in their first innings, still needing 98 runs to avoid the follow-on.They briefly held hope of mowing the runs down as tail-ender

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New Zealand scripted a beautiful story to become the fourth team to secure a Test victory after facing a follow-on. Each player stepped up when the moment demanded it. Kane Williamson and Neil Wagner played a pivotal role in making this test match a classic one. After being put into bat by New Zealand captain Tim Southee, England put up a blistering performance in the first innings of the second Test. On the back of hundreds from Harry Brook (186) and Joe Root (153*), they got to 435/8 in merely 87.1 overs. England's bowlers then got into the act to bundle out the Kiwis for 209. England skipper Ben Stokes enforced the follow-on.
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New Zealand on Tuesday edged out England by 1 runs to win the second Test at the Basin Reserve in Wellington and levelled the two-match series at 1-1. Neil Wagner was the star of the show for the Kiwis as he bagged a four-wicket haul, including the decisive wicket of James Anderson. With England needing two just two runs to sweep the series, Wagner targetted Anderson with short balls and was rewarded with it as New Zealand wicketkeeper Tom Blundell pulled off a diving catch to make history.

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