Key events
Revised hours of play (GMT)
Hamilton is 13 hours ahead.
âHaving worked over the weekend, and been so busy I didnât get to check the first day score until close of play, I have a day off, cleared to do nothing but enjoy Test matches,â begins Phil Withall. âThanks to the wonderful weather, itâs starting to look like I may actually have to do something productive.â
If youâre at a loose end Iâve got a tax return that just oozes potential productivity.
Itâs a little brighter in Brisbane, apparently, so we might have even play in both Test matches.
âItâs almost Christmas and Iâm feeling sentimental, so I was wondering if it rains long enough, could England consider playing for a draw like the old times?â wonders Angus King. âSclerotic run rates and Beckettian melancholy would really gladden this old timerâs heart. And what is the B*****l equivalent of Is It Cowardly To Pray For Rain?â
Thatâs a great question. Erm, It Is Cowardly To Pray For Rain?
Lunch
An update from Ali. An early lunch will be taken at 12.30pm local time (11.30pm GMT), and if thereâs no further rain play will begin an hour later: 1.30pm local time/12.30am GMT.
With that, Iâm going to head off for whatever constitutes lunch at this hour. See you in a bit.
Australia v India, day three
Play is due to begin in Brisbane in just under 40 minutes. âDueâ being the operative word because itâs hooning down there as well.
âPlease tell Thomas I hold my hand up, I got it wrong,â writes Kim Thonger. âI withdraw zero and offer instead very few Germans are interested in cricket. My attacking game relies too heavily on hyperbole. Shamefaced, I trudge back to the pavilion, the dismissal going in the book as Hit Wicket b Meehan.â
Iâve just seen the official scorecard, which, in a controversial development, reads Thonger b Thonger -1. Itâs the first negative score in cricket history and the first time a player has dismissed themselves. More news as we get it.
Weather update in crossword form
The rain is a bit lighter but, even so, my flabber will be aghast if thereâs any play before lunch.
âIt seems unlikely,â begins Tom Van der Gucht, and heâs not kidding. âBut if England can take advantage of the cloud cover to roll over the Black Caps for 50, and with Crawley due a triple century to push his average back into the low 30s and cement his place in the team until after the Ashes, then maybe, just maybe, England have what Dave Podmore would describe as a sniff of a hint of a chance. Thatâs all Stokes needs…â
Actually, while I wouldnât give England tuppence here, I spent yesterday/earlier today looking back at some of their acts of escapology in the first Bazball summer. I didnât give them tuppence in these games either.
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New Zealand, Lordâs NZ effectively 242 for 4 in their second innings. England win by five wickets
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New Zealand, Trent Bridge England 93 for 4, chasing 299. England win by five wickets
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New Zealand, Headingley England 55 for 6 in their first innings, still 274 runs behind. England win by seven wickets
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India, Edgbaston India effectively 285 for three in their second innings. England win by seven wickets
We didnât know we were born.
âMorning Rob,â writes Thomas Meehan. âI can confirm that some Germans are cricket fans. Johanna, my houseguest from a few years ago and a champion Sportlerin herself, was very keen on seeing a game; her partner Richy possibly less so. Unfortunately it was out of season so instead we wandered down the hill to Coogee Oval to watch Randwick play.â
Bad news from Hamilton
âIt is now raining again and the covers are coming back on…â writes Ali.
Good news from Hamilton
âInterestingly, we have some peelage of the covers occurring.,â writes Ali Martin. âBethell, Stone, Root, Anderson playing a game of keepy ups in front of the pavilion.â
âHigh praise for Will OâRourke, but well-earned I feel, as he has a bit of Courtney Walsh about his action and the deceptive nastiness of his short ball,â writes Gary Naylor. âThe difference in age between 21 and 23 is a lot more than that between 31 and 33 in Test cricket, but Jacob Bethell (21) looked very raw indeed against OâRourke (23) yesterday.
âStrokemaking for a batter is like shot-stopping for a goalkeeper â eye-catching, but if they couldnât do it, they wouldnât be a pro. Whether young Bethell can go on to master the equivalent of goalkeeper commanding his box through anticipation, footwork and personality remains to be seen â going to be fun finding out though, isnât it?â
Walsh is a good comparison; like OâRourke, his angles were awkward and he got the ball to follow right-handers. The other bowler he reminds me of is peak Steve Harmison.
I think thatâs slightly harsh on Bethell. The shot to get out was poor, but then so were Brookâs and Rootâs and they hadnât been worked over. Before that he dealt pretty well with a couple of really horrible throat balls. Donât forget that OâRourke roughed up Ben Stokes even more emphatically in the previous Test.
That said, it did give me pause over Bethellâs potential role in the top three against India and Australia. For now heâs first reserve and I wouldnât deviate from that. In the long term Iâd put him my house on him making it; heâs the best under-23 England batter since Joe Root. And heâll have learned so much from these three Tests.
âOne of those days,â writes Ali Martin, our main at Seddon Park. âBit of rain first thing and now sort of overcast, dank and spotting. And as I type that a droplet lands on my phone screen fhremmajsnslrh.â
England Women are also in action against South Africa in Bloemfontein. On the first day of their one-off Test, Maia Bouchier made a charming debut century and Nat Sciver-Brunt reaffirmed her all-time greatness. Her consistent brilliance, particularly with the bat, is mind-blowing.
The weather forecast is better after lunch so Iâm sure there will be plenty of play. If not, thereâs always Australia v India at the Gabba. Hang on, the forecast is iffy there as well.
âEvening Rob,â writes Kim Thonger. âIâve spent the last couple of days in Germany. Even though a large proportion of Germans are sports mad, I can confirm what we all knew. Nobody has the slightest interest in cricket of any sort.
âIâve been pondering, could it be that those responsible for preparing school playing fields have always been horrified by the imperial measurements used to create pitches and equipment?
âFor example. Here is a list of imperial measurements used in cricket and their metric conversions:
Cricket pitch Length 22 yards (66 feet) is approximately 20.12 meters
Cricket pitch Width 10 feet is approximately 3.05 meters
Boundary distance Typically ranges from 50 to 90 yards, equivalent to 45.72 to 82.29 meters
Bat length Maximum of 38 inches, which is about 96.52 centimeters.
Ball weight Between 5.5 and 5.75 ounces, or approximately 156 to 163 grams
âIf we compromised slightly â for example, the pitch could be 20x3m â maybe ground staff in the village of Gschlachtenbretzingen, located in Baden-Württemberg (it really exists), might be less reticent?â
Nobody in Germany is interested in cricket? Tell that to Ben Kohler-Cadmore!
Start delayed
Itâs raining in Hamilton so play wonât start at 10pm GMT as scheduled. I have no idea what else to tell you.
Iâm with Colly. Though England werenât great yesterday, the game turned on a spell of fast bowling from Will OâRourke that any of the great West Indians of the 1980s would have been proud to bowl.
Preamble
Oh well! Englandâs hopes of a 3-0 series win were smashed to smithereens by Will OâRourke and friends on the second day in Hamilton. Now they â and we, although I suppose you are free to go to bed if you like â must endure the admin of defeat. For the next couple of sessions, Englandâs bowlers are likely get an insight into how Sisyphus felt.
New Zealand will resume on 136 for three, a lead of 340, with Kane Williamson on 50 and Rachin Ravindra on 2. England will tell themselves they can chase anything. But even in Test cricketâs year of the unexpected, an England win feels impossible.
That doesnât mean todayâs play has no value. Itâs a particularly important day for Shoaib Bashir, who is having a poor end to a largely excellent first year in Test cricket. Bashir is probably Englandâs greatest concern ahead of their big year. He looks tired, mentally rather than physically, and a few months off will do him good.
Bashir can still end on a high. A three-for would make him the second youngest bowler to take 50 Test wickets in a calendar year (the youngest was Kapil Dev in 1979). Even allowing for the inordinate volume of Test cricket that England have played it would be a lovely achievement and a reminder â to us and more importantly to Bashir â that what he has achieved is not remotely normal.