England v. New Zealand: Second Cornhill Test
From The New Zealanders in England, 1994; Wisden, 1995
(pp. 363-366)
Image: Dion Nash at Lords
At Lord's, June 16, 17, 18, 19, 20. Drawn. Toss: New Zealand.
In five days at Lord's, Ray Illingworth learned a great deal
more about the task ahead of his selection panel than he did
during his heady start at Trent Bridge. the innings victory
in the First Test brought a bullish response form the England
camp when they turned up in London for the Second, with Atherton
talking about his team "developing a ruthless streak, kicking
opponents while they are down and wrapping up the series".
By Monday evening, however, with their tailenders hanging
on grimly in the gloom, England were relieved to escape with
a draw and their 1-0 lead in the series intact.
The Test was a fascinating contest and, for the unfancied
tourists, an enormously encouraging match. Just as England
dominated at Trent Bridge, so New Zealand were always in command
here, but without quite getting the reward they deserved-
their first ever Lord's Test victory. Their young and talented
team came of age and suggested the future of New Zealand cricket
was not in such bad hands after all. None of the bright lights
shone more brilliantly than Nash, a boyish, enthusiastic pace
bowler who was overcome with emotion by the ovation he recieved
from the Lord's crowd. In his fifth Test, he finished with
figures of 11 for 169, the best bowling return by a New Zealander
against England, and with a half-century too- a double no
player had achieved in a Lord's Test before- he was named
Man of the Match.
Nash, bowling at a vigorous fast-medium from the Pavilion
End, got extra bounce from a slow wicket; he disconcerted
even the best England batsmen and made the ball move sharply,
especially away from the bat. His improvement was far more
significant than any of New Zealand's three team changes.
Pocock returned as opener in place of Hartland, while Pringle
and Owens beefed up the pace attack in place of Larsen and
Davis. Disappointingly for them, their most experienced bowler,
Morrison, was on his way home with a hamstring injury. England
made just one change, the Northhamptonshire left-armer Taylor
coming in for his home Test debut in place of Malcolm, who
made a disgruntled return to his county 24 hours before the
Test began, after being told he would not be in the team.
For the second time, left-arm spinner Stemp was also omitted
from the final eleven. Atherton, having lost his sixth successive
Test toss, switched around seven bowlers with little joy.
Only when DeFreitas worked tirelessly for his captain and
collected six wickets in the match to add to his nine in the
First Test, making his latest England comeback look more permanent.
After an early wobble on the first morning, New Zealand built
an impressive first innings score over the opening two days
around Crowe, who treated the Lord's crowd to a century- his
16th- of the highest calibre. Though his movement was restricted
by a brace on his right knee following his recent operation,
Crowe showed there are still few cleaner hitters of the ball
in the world. His 142 included 20 fours and three sixes, one
of which, off Fraser, made him only the second New Zealander,
after John Wright, to pass 5,000 Test runs.
To England's frustration, they could not sweep away the New
Zealand batting, even after Crowe was out at 350 for six.
All the late-order batsmen made valuable contributions to
a total of 476, which sorely tested England's ability to avoid
the follow on. To the astonishment of a packed Saturday crowd,
they crumbled, after a powerful start by Stewart. A three-and-a-half-hour
vigil by Rhodes for 32 not out kept England alive, and Rhodes
and last man Such scraped past the follow-on target before
Such became Nash's sixth victim. But New Zealand, with a lead
of 195, were still in a position to declare an hour before
the close on the fourth day, setting England to chase 407.
It would have been a record fourth-innings total to win a
Test had England made it, but, after another bright start
by Stewart and Atherton, their hopes were oblitterated in
Nash's second-last over of the day when he removed Atherton
and Gooch.
The only objective then was survival. Despite a highly polished
century from Stewart, his third in four Tests, England kept
losing wickets at important times, Hick and Smith in particular
struggling to assert their authority. The last hour arrived
with New Zealand three wickets from victory. But Rhodes, first
with Fraser, then with Taylor, blocked out time, while Such
gnawed his nails on the balcony. As the poor light closed
in, forcing Rutherford to withdraw Nash, who had removed five
of the top six batsmen, Rhodes filibustered and fussed to
eat up valuable seconds, frustrating New Zealand and earning
the displeasure of the umpires. England, however, held on
with two wickets to spare. Even with a £360 fine per
man for slow over-rates, they must have thought they escaped
lightly.- Colin Bateman.
Man of the Match: D. J. Nash. Attendance: 86, 035; reciepts:
£1, 655, 289
Close of play: First day, New Zealand 316-4 (M. D. Crowe
133*, S.A. Thomson 68*); Second day, England 94-1 (M. A. Atherton
27*, G. A. Gooch 13*); Third day, England 281; Fourth day,
England 56-0 (M. A. Atherton 29*, A. J. Stewart 25*).
New Zealand
B. A. Young lbw b Fraser...0
B. A. Pocock c Smith b Such...10
*K. R. Rutherford c Stewart b DeFreitas...37
M. D. Crowe c Smith b DeFreitas...142
S. P. Fleming lbw b Fraser...41
S. A. Thomson run out...69
+A. C. Parore c Rhodes b Taylor...40
M. N. Hart b Such...25
D. J. Nash b White...56
C. Pringle c Hick b DeFreitas...14
M. B. Owens not out...2
Extras: b 3, lb 15, w 1, nb 21...40
Total 476
1/0 (1) 2/39 (2) 3/67 (3) 4/138 (5) 5/318 (6) 6/350 (4)
7/391 (7) 8/397 (8) 9/434 (10) 10/476 (9)
Bowling: Fraser 36-9-102-2; DeFreitas 35-8-102-3; Taylor
20-4-64-1; Such 30-8-84-2; White 21.1-4-84-1; Gooch 5-1-13-0;
Hick 2-0-9-0.
England
*M. A. Atherton lbw b Hart...28 A. J. Stewart c Parore
b Nash...45
G. A. Gooch lbw b Nash...13
R. A. Smith c&b Nash...6
G. A. Hick c Young b Pringle...58
C. White run out...51
+S. J. Rhodes not out...32
P. A. J. DeFreitas c Parore b Thomson...11
A. R. C. Fraser c&b Nash...10
J. P. Taylor c Parore b Nash...0
P. M. Such c Parore b Nash...4
Extras: b 4, lb 12, nb 7...23
Total: 281
Fall: 1/65 (2) 2/95 (3) 3/95 (1) 4/101 (4) 5/193 (6) 6/225
(5) 7/241 (8) 8/265 (9) 9/271 (10) 10/281 (11)
Bowling: Owens 7-0-34-0; Nash 25-6-76-6; Pringle 23-5-65-1;
Hart 44-21-50-1; Thomson 22-8-40-1.
New Zealand
B. A. Pocock lbw b DeFreitas...2 B. A. Young c Hick b Such...94
*K. R. Rutherford lbw b DeFreitas...0
M. D. Crowe b DeFreitas...9
S. P. Fleming lbw bTaylor...39
S. A. Thomson not out...38
+A. C. Parore not out...15
Extras: lb 4, nb 10...14
Total: (5 wkts dec.) 211
Fall: 1/9 (1) 2/9 (3) 3/29 (4) 4/144 (5) 5/170 (2)
Bowling: Fraser 15-0-50-0; DeFreitas 16-0-63-3; Such 25-5-55-1;
White 4-1-21-0; Hick 2-2-0-0; Taylor 6-2-18-1.
England
*M. A. Atherton c Young b Nash...33
A. J. Stewart c Crowe b Nash...119
G. A. Gooch lbw b Nash...0
R. A. Smith c Parore b Nash...23
G. A. Hick lbw b Pringle...37
C. White c Thomson b Nash...9
+S. J. Rhodes not out...24
P. A. J. DeFreitas lbw b Owens...3
A. R. C. Fraser lbw b Hart...2
Extras: b 2, lb 1, nb 1...4
Total: (8 wkts) 254
Fall: 1/60 (1) 2/60 (3) 3/136 (4) 4/210 (5) 5/217 (2) 6/240
(6) 7/244 (8) 8/250 (9)
Bowling: Nash 29-8-93-5; Owens 10-3-35-1; Hart 41-23-55-1;
Pringle 16-5-41-1; Thomson 12-4-27-0.
Umpires: S. A. Bucknor (Wesy Indies) and N. T. Plews.
Referee: C. H. Lloyd (West Indies).
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