England vs New Zealand: Ben Stokes' side stage mini fightback deep into draining first day of series decider at Trent Bridge
Tom Latham (151) and Devon Conway (157) share in New Zealand record-opening partnership of 317 vs England; hosts take four wickets in final session - including two in two balls to end day; watch day two live on Sky Sports Cricket from 10.15am, Friday (first ball 11am)
Thursday 25 June 2026 19:52, UK
England staged a mini fightback deep into an otherwise demoralising, draining first day of the series deciding third Test against New Zealand at a scorching Trent Bridge.
Tom Latham (151) and Devon Conway (157) had seemingly batted England into submission with a record 317-run opening partnership against their hosts, only for four wickets to fall in little more than an hour to see the Black Caps reduced to 361-4 by stumps.
Ben Stokes (1-57), back as captain after he and Gus Atkinson served a one-match suspension, provided the breakthrough as Latham - dropped on 129 by Jamie Smith - was this time snapped up by the wicketkeeper, while Conway followed his partner back to the pavilion an over later as he perished in the deep off Joe Root (1-7).
- Scorecard: England vs New Zealand, third Test, Trent Bridge
- Got Sky? Watch England vs NZ live on the Sky Sports app
- Not got Sky? Get instant access with NOW - no contract
Atkinson (1-62) and Jofra Archer (1-53) then took two wickets in two balls to end the day's play as Rachin Ravindra (7) fell to a top-edged hack across the line and Henry Nicholls (36) nicked off.
Stokes warmly welcomed back but endures testing return
For long periods of the day, it looked set to be a punishing return to the side as skipper for Stokes, though little blame could be laid at his door for his side's struggles, with the exception of losing a crucial toss.
Latham, unsurprisingly, opted to make first use of a belting batting surface baked in sunshine, much to the visible frustration of Stokes, who was forthcoming in admitting England would have done the same.
Stokes, who spoke prior to the Test of being "frustrated" and "disappointed" about how his and Atkinson's suspension unfolded, was warmly welcomed back by the home crowd when his first bowl of the morning was greeted with huge cheers.
The pair were dropped from England's second Test defeat at The Oval after breaking a curfew at a nightclub in west London where an incident took place in the early hours of June 8 when celebrating the series-opening victory at Lord's. They were later cleared of any wrongdoing following investigations conducted by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) and the Independent Cricket Regulator.
Latham and Conway cash in before late flurry of wickets
Chances were few and far between for England on what was, for the most part, a chastening first day in Nottingham, and they were at fault for spurning the rare openings they did create.
Latham, when on 8, edged through a gap at third slip off Archer, the very next ball after that man had been moved out of the cordon to gully.
England wasted an lbw review to Conway on 61, with Josh Tongue's yorker sliding comfortably down leg, while they then failed to refer a Shoaib Bashir shout that would have seen the opener out for 71.
England opted against sending the appeal to DRS due to detecting bat on ball, but Conway's inside edge was struck after pad first and the ball was shown to be going on to hit the stumps.
Latham and Conway ultimately cruised to their respective 17th and eighth Test centuries, with the latter beginning to up the tempo after doing so, tucking into Bashir in particular as he hit the spinner for two of three sixes for his fine innings.
The opening pair soon had 150s to their names, pushing their partnership beyond the 300 mark, before England finally made the breakthrough.
And of course it was Stokes who provided it, letting out a huge roar in celebration that surely had some frustration mixed in with it, as Latham feathered an edge behind.
Conway then attempted one big shot too many when holing out to deep midwicket in Root's next over, suddenly giving England an opening and two new batters at the crease.
The second new ball was taken late in the evening, but it looked like Ravindra and Nicholls - fresh from his century in the tourists' second Test win at The Oval - were lining up big scores of their own into the second day's play until Atkinson and Archer struck late on to give England another sizeable lift in such sapping conditions.
'Late momentum for England'
Sky Sports Cricket's Stuart Broad:
"You always say in the changing room 'keep going'. You don't know what this surface will look like in a few days, anything can happen.
"A little bit of momentum from England at the back end of the day but there isn't any doubt the first day of this Test match belonged to New Zealand.
"We have no idea what this pitch will do. It's very unusual for us in this country to get this sort of baking weather on a surface. It might play great for three days and then we just don't know.
"First-innings runs are a premium. New Zealand will be disappointed with the finish they had but they are still in an excellent position."
Conway challenges New Zealand to 'kick on'
Devon Conway (157 off 224 balls), speaking to Sky Sports Cricket:
"Great day for us. Nice to build a partnership with Tom [Latham]. I'm pretty happy with how things went for us.
"We knew the wicket would be quite nice and we knew it would be important to put pressure on the bowling. It was nice to be there for an extended period of time and build a partnership.
"I don't know what par is [on this pitch]. It's a little disappointing to have lost two wickets at the end but we've got a lot of batters in the shed so hopefully we can kick on, keep building those partnerships and see where we get to."
England vs New Zealand - results and schedule
All times UK and Ireland, all games live on Sky Sports
- First Test (Lord's) - England won by 115 runs
- Second Test (The Kia Oval) - New Zealand won by 253 runs
- Third Test (Trent Bridge) - June 25-29 (11am)
Watch day two of the third Test between England and New Zealand, live on Sky Sports Cricket on Friday from 10.15am (first ball 11am). Stream cricket and more with NOW - no contract.