Henry Nicholls hits an unbeaten 119 as New Zealand commands Day 3 of the 2nd Test against England at The Oval. Read about Matt Henry’s 5-wicket haul and the match report.
Introduction:
New Zealand took complete control of the second Test match against England on a warm, action-packed third day in South London. Standing tall in the absence of the recently retired batting legend Kane Williamson, left-hander Henry Nicholls delivered a batting masterclass. His spectacular, unbeaten century ground down a weary English bowling attack and pushed the Black Caps into a commanding position. See also:Â Glenn Phillips Makes History with Maiden Test Century
By the time stumps were drawn on Day 3, New Zealand had reached 252/3 in their second innings. This magnificent batting display hands the visitors a massive, overall lead of 352 runs with seven wickets still firmly in hand. With two days left to play, the Kiwis are perfectly placed to level the three-match series after dropping the opening encounter at Lord’s.

Matt Henry Five-Wicket Haul Sinks England despite Fisher’s resistance
The morning session began with England resuming their first innings at a shaky 222/6. The overnight batting pair of Jordan Cox and Jofra Archer hoped to narrow the first-innings deficit under clear blue skies. However, New Zealand’s senior paceman Matt Henry had other plans. Returning to action with incredible rhythm after being troubled by back spasms in the previous game, Henry ripped through the English lower-order with relentless accuracy.

Henry struck early by removing debutant Jordan Cox for 27, courtesy of a sharp diving catch from captain Tom Latham at short midwicket. He then dismissed Jofra Archer for eight before taking out Josh Tongue to complete a brilliant five-wicket haul. Henry finished with outstanding figures of 5/80 in 24 overs, registering his seventh five-wicket haul in Test cricket.

England looked down and out at 238/9, but a courageous last-wicket stand delayed the lunch break. Number nine batter Matthew Fisher played a heroic, career-best innings to frustrate the visitors. Displaying superb confidence on his Surrey home ground, Fisher smashed a defiant 50 not out—his maiden half-century in Test match cricket. Supported beautifully by final-man Sonny Baker in a 53-run partnership, Fisher lifted England to 291 runs before Kyle Jamieson wrapped up the innings on the stroke of lunch. Despite the tail-end fightback, New Zealand secured a highly valuable 100-run first-innings lead.

Early Wickets Give England Hope Before Ravindra and Nicholls Unite
Needing an explosive start with the ball, England’s frontline quicks immediately put New Zealand on the defensive. Jofra Archer struck a massive blow in the third over, producing a beautiful delivery that found the edge of captain Tom Latham’s bat. Shortly after, Josh Tongue teased Devon Conway into a loose drive with his very first delivery of the day, leaving the tourists reeling at a dangerous 28/2.

With the match hanging in the balance, Rachin Ravindra joined Henry Nicholls in the middle. The two left-handers played with extreme maturity to absorb the initial pressure. Fortune favored the brave when a diving James Rew dropped a difficult catch off Ravindra when the young batter was on just seven.

Taking full advantage of the reprieve, Ravindra and Nicholls batted beautifully through the afternoon, picking gaps with precision. Ravindra completed an elegant, 79-ball half-century, punishing anything short or wide. The duo combined for a historic 161-run partnership for the third wicket—marking New Zealand’s highest-ever Test stand at The Oval.
Late Drama as Nicholls Reaches 11th Test Ton
England desperately needed a breakthrough, and stand-in captain Joe Root found it through the left-arm spin of Jacob Bethell. Deep into the final session, Bethell trapped the attacking Ravindra leg-before-wicket for a wonderful 76 runs off 99 balls, which included 11 stylish boundaries.
However, Ravindra’s departure did little to slow down the resolute Nicholls. The 34-year-old middle-order batter continued to flay the English attack, reaching his 11th Test century by pulling Bethell to the midwicket fence. Nicholls finished the day unbeaten on a masterful 119 runs. Alongside him, dependable batsman Daryl Mitchell added late steel, finishing 32 not out to cap off a flawless afternoon for the touring side.
