Scotland Wales Northern Ireland
BBCi CATEGORIES   TV   RADIO   COMMUNICATE   WHERE I LIVE   INDEX    SEARCH 

BBC SPORT
You are in: Cricket: England  
Front Page
Football
Cricket
Statistics
England
Counties
Scorecards
The Ashes
Rugby Union
Rugby League
Tennis
Golf
Motorsport
Boxing
Athletics
Other Sports
Sports Talk
In Depth
Photo Galleries
TV & Radio
BBC Pundits
Question of Sport
Funny Old Game

Around The Uk


Commonwealth Games 2002

BBC News

BBC Weather

SERVICES 
  Monday, 1 April, 2002, 05:28 GMT 06:28 UK
England suffer early setbacks
England pay their respects to the Queen Mother
England pay their respects to the Queen Mother
Third Test, Auckland, day three: England 12-3 v New Zealand 202 all out (bad light stopped play.)

Click here for scorecard

Only 28 overs were possible on day three, but this final Test in the series has taken an unexpected twist with New Zealand's unsung new ball bowlers on fire.

In a sensational first over, Daryl Tuffey dismissed Marcus Trescothick and Mark Butcher for ducks.

And the crisis deepened when Nasser Hussain edged Chris Drum straight to slip as England slumped to 11-3.

Tuffey, playing his first Test of the series, had Trescothick plum lbw to a full, swinging ball. Then Butcher rather tamely prodded a short one straight to short leg.

Harris's 71 was a fine knock on a difficult pitch
Harris's 71 was a fine knock on a difficult pitch

Michael Vaughan hit the first boundary in the fourth over - cutting Drum for four. But just when England looked to steady the ship, they lost their captain Hussain.

It had been another day ravaged by bad weather, coming on the back of a total wash-out on Sunday.

And bad light came just when England needed a reprieve.

New Zealand lost their last five wickets earlier in the day.

Chris Harris was the first batsman to go - given out for 71, though he was at the receiving end of a poor decision from umpire Venkat.

After another break for rain, Adam Parore finally relieved the boredom with an aggressive pull for four off Matthew Hoggard.

And in the next over he hit an extra cover drive off Andrew Flintoff for a handsome six.

Hoggard then claimed England's second wicket of the day, removing Daniel Vettori lbw for just three with a full, swinging delivery.

Flintoff took three of the last five Kiwi wickets
Flintoff took three of the last five Kiwi wickets

And Flintoff soon had Parore caught at fine leg for 45, one ball after Nasser Hussain had dropped Andre Adams at first slip.

Adams did not last long - skying an easy catch off Flintoff for Ashley Giles at mid-wicket - to depart for seven on his debut.

And the final wicket came when Tuffey hit Hoggard straight to fine leg.

In the first hour of play, Harris, who matched his best score in Tests, managed to add 86 runs for the sixth wicket with Parore, the Black Caps' wicket-keeper playing his final Test.

Rough decision

But the partnership ended when the left-handed Harris was the victim of a rough lbw decision to a ball that pitched some way outside leg stump.

The over before the same batsman survived a much better appeal.

Play began after a three-hour rain delay and a minute's silence to mark the death of the Queen Mother.

The pitch showed more pace than it had on Saturday, and there was swing movement and plenty of bounce.

 WATCH/LISTEN
 ON THIS STORY
BBC cricket correspondent Jonathan Agnew
England closed in some trouble"
England cricket coach Duncan Fletcher
"We have a big battle on our hands"
Internet links:


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

Links to more England stories are at the foot of the page.

 

E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more England stories

^^ Back to top