Big picture: Tim Southee, Ben Stokes, and friendly fire
The site of the first Test between New Zealand and England sits slap-bang in the middle of the Bay of Plenty, one of the six regions covered by the declaration signed at 8.43am by the minister for emergency management, Kieran McAnulty. Yet, conditions allowed the teams to train in the outdoors at Bay Oval, though nets took place in the greenhouse-like indoor area just off the main field.
Ticket demands for the day-nighter starting Thursday have been strong, heartening given this was a return to unrestricted crowds after the Covid-19 restrictions in place for the 2021-22 season. But now, there is a nagging sense this match and series could underwhelm.
There has been idle chat about forfeiting an innings, which is exactly the kind of pub fare that England are all about. And Southee, as per Brendon McCullum’s estimation, is always willing to push the game on and it wouldn’t be a surprise if this turns into a friendly captaincy duel with Stokes. These two disciples of Baz haven’t made their names by taking backward steps.
The pair even hung out during the Hamilton warm-up match when Southee finished a bowling spell and Stokes was chilling on the sidelines. No cricket was discussed, merely catching up and reminiscing about past interactions. The T20 World Cup last October, the previous series between them last June – they did not need to root through the memory bank for particularly long. As far as Test series go, there aren’t many as friendly as this. But make no mistake – the product on the field will be the better for it.
Form guide
New Zealand DDLLL (last five Tests, most recent first)
England WWWWW
In the spotlight: Neil Wagner and Ben Duckett
Team news: Stuart Broad back, Blair Tickner set for debut
New Zealand: 1 Tom Latham, 2 Devon Conway, 3 Kane Williamson, 4 Henry Nicholls, 5 Daryl Mitchell, 6 Tom Blundell (wk), 7 Michael Bracewell, 8 Scott Kuggeleijn/Jacob Duffy, 9 Tim Southee (capt), 10 Neil Wagner, 11 Blair Tickner
England: 1 Zak Crawley, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 Harry Brook, 6 Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Ben Foakes (wk), 8 Ollie Robinson, 9 Jack Leach, 10 Stuart Broad, 11 James Anderson
Pitch and conditions
The cyclone has played havoc with preparations for the groundstaff, too, but the conditions were pristine on Wednesday, blue skies, baking sun. The drainage is impressive and the surface is understandably green after so long under the covers. As of 2pm local time, there was a light grey streak through the middle, but Stokes was reticent to judge the pitch on aesthetics outright: “Watching Test matches in New Zealand in the past, [I] don’t think you can look too much into the wickets when they’re green like that.” England played on a greener-looking surface at Hamilton, which produced 775 runs in 151.3 overs across both days. So who knows…
Stats and trivia
Quotes
“It’s been unusual for us as a country. A lot of people going through tough times. Hopefully, the weather can hold off we can get some cricket in. There’s not been lot of international cricket in New Zealand this summer, so hopefully, we can give people something to watch and look forward to.”
New Zealand captain Tim Southee hopes the team can provide the country with a welcome distraction
“The batting group have got a huge understanding of what they can do now because we’ve let them be free. It’s almost like they get themselves in first and second gear and then all of a sudden they’ll go up to fifth because they see that as an opportunity to pounce and really put teams back under pressure.”
Ben Stokes explains the rationale behind England’s explosive batting exploits
Vithushan Ehantharajah is an associate editor at ESPNcricinfo