Jofra Archer speeding around on a Segway, Dom Sibley’s fast start and Ben Stokes stirs England to life. Here’s the pick of day one at Mount Maunganui…

The Report

SCORECARD | HOW IT HAPPENED

Ben Stokes struck an unbeaten 67 off 114 balls to wrestle the initiative away from a disciplined New Zealand attack on day one of the first Test, at Bay Oval, writes Oli Burley.

Stokes compiled the third half-century of England’s total of 241-4 after opener Rory Burns (52 off 138) and Joe Denly (74 off 181) dug deep to chisel out a platform.


New Zealand vs England

November 21, 2019, 9:30pm

Live on

Moment of the Day

The sight of Jofra Archer zipping around on a Segway before play got underway takes some beating, even if Joe Root perhaps didn’t quite see the funny side. You can bet it would have made a few headlines had England’s ‘X-factor’ bowler taken an x-rated tumble before the series had even begun.

Dom Sibley also made a fast start to the day, getting off the mark in Test cricket with a boundary from his first delivery faced. While it’s true he couldn’t have wished for a more inviting ball than the full delivery served up by Trent Boult, the manner in which he dispatched it through midwicket suggested this was a debutant far from overawed.

First ball in Test cricket: 4⃣!

What a start for Sibley! ?

Watch England's opening Test against New Zealand live on Sky Sports Cricket now or follow online: https://t.co/CBpkQw3bjR pic.twitter.com/Zmfg5LSMkp

Stats of the Day

Dom Sibley's debut innings comes to an end with all 22 of his runs coming in the leg-side. The wicket ball was the only ball he edged throughout his whole innings. #NZvEng pic.twitter.com/JS15cZO2av

Burns' edge through the slips took him to 101 career runs from edges. The only player to have scored more runs from edges since Burns made his debut is Joe Denly (103). #NZvEng

Joe Root's last 28 balls against left-arm seam in Tests:

14 runs
20 dots
2 wickets#NZvEng

Talking Point

Did either side do themselves justice? As tight as New Zealand bowled for the majority of the day, their early tactics against debutant Dom Sibley caused some raised eyebrows. Ian Smith in the commentary box, for one, couldn’t quite understand why it took the hosts so long to challenge Sibley to drive repeatedly through the off-side. He found an ally in Mike Atherton, who said: “I was slightly surprised at how long it took New Zealand to adjust their lines into the areas where you expect to bowl at Sibley.” Factor in the lives given to Burns and Stokes and New Zealand’s day could have turned out much better.

England were certainly very patient and very disciplined in their batting, no doubt, but could they have rotated the strike more and perhaps even taken the game to the Kiwis? David Lloyd looked a disconsolate figure during tea, when he opined that England were in danger of being becalmed, such was their tiptoe approach. But the stand between Stokes and Denly, plus the positive contribution of Pope, means England can be optimistic going into day two.

Tweets of the Day

England's new batting mantra under Root and Silverwood is: "It doesn't matter how long it takes."
Bat time, absorb balls and pressure. Grind down the bowlers.
Nobody could say they are disobeying instructions.
145-3 after 68 overs

I am absolutely all for patience at the crease. Grinding it out. Staying there and wearing the oppo down. However, it’s quite hard work if you are doing middle of the night viewing.

Ok. You win Sky NZ..! pic.twitter.com/iBpbeLKy0B

Test cricket is back! Mount Maunganui in the background at the toss as we embark on the first ever Test on this superb venue – Bay Oval. ?☀️ pic.twitter.com/jjbDVaDbZX

What they said

England’s Rory Burns: “I found it quite tough after lunch – a bit of lack of pace and that new ball wore off as well, so there’s a little bit to work on and I’m disappointed not to cash in.

“In terms of seam movement, it’s actually quite slow and hard to score on. I think it’ll slow up over the five days, that’s how it felt. For periods there it was quite tough and to fight through and come out the way we have, I think it was a good day’s cricket.”

James Franklin: “Stokes has started this winter like he left last summer in England, he played beautifully. England will be hoping he can make a big hundred tomorrow because they’ve had some good starts but they really need someone to kick on and get a big hundred. Hopefully from England’s point of view that’s Ben Stokes.”

Source: Read Full Article