ENG vs NZ – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Sat, 01 Nov 2025 21:36:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png ENG vs NZ – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 England loses the 3rd ODI against New Zealand by 2 wickets and the series 3-0 https://artifex.news/article70230801-ece/ Sat, 01 Nov 2025 21:36:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70230801-ece/ Read More “England loses the 3rd ODI against New Zealand by 2 wickets and the series 3-0” »

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New Zealand’s Zak Foulkes, second left, celebrates with teammates after taking a catch to dismiss England’s Jacob Bethell during their T20 cricket match in Hamilton, New Zealand, Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2025.
| Photo Credit: AP

England will head to the five-test Ashes series in Australia low on form and confidence after being bowled out for 222 in a two-wicket loss to New Zealand in the third one-day international Saturday (November 1, 2025) and a 3-0 series defeat.

New Zealand was desperate at the end, with two wickets remaining and 28 runs still needed to win. But Zak Foulkes with 14 not out and Blair Tickner, with an unbeaten 18, saw New Zealand home with 32 balls to spare and a total of 226-8.

New Zealand won the first match by four wickets and the second by five wickets.

England captain Harry Brook bowled out Jofra Archer, Brydon Carse and Jamie Overton, leaving Sam Curran and Adil Rashid to bowl the critical final overs.

The problem for England was its batting. For the third time in the three-match series, England was bowled out inside 50 overs as its top order faltered against quick and accurate swing bowling.

New Zealand’s run chase was impeded by two runouts at the non-striker’s end but Daryl Mitchell’s 44 took it close to victory.

Overton had scores of 46 and 42 in the first two matches of the series and has been outstanding batting at No. 8, outshining England’s specialist batters. He is unavailable for the Ashes, having chosen not to play test cricket.

On Saturday, England slumped to 44-4 at the end of the first 10-over power play before being saved by the middle and lower order.

“That’s one thing we’ve spoken about. We didn’t get big enough scores for us to be able to defend them and to give the bowlers a big enough chances to win us the games,” Brook said. “We’ll go back, we’ll take the learnings we’ve made from this trip here and we’ll try our best to be better in the future.”

Jamie Smith, Ben Duckett, Joe Root and Jacob Bethell will all head to Australia with few runs under their belt.

Smith was out for 5 Saturday, Duckett for 8, Root for 2, Bethell for 11 and Brook, who has been England’s mainstay in the series, was dismissed for 6. Brook scored 175 runs in his three innings in the series.

The late resistance came first from Jos Buttler who made 38 and put on 53 in a partnership for the sixth wicket with Sam Curran (17) which more than doubled England’s total.

Overton and Brydon Carse then put on 58 for the eighth wicket. Carse hit four sixes in his 36 while Overton reached his half century from 50 balls with consecutive fours off Blair Tickner. He hit 10 fours and two sixes.

England bowled well in defence of an inadequate total, though Jofra Archer conceded 53 runs from 10 overs without taking a wicket. His fifth over cost 24 runs.

Overton took 2-32 to add to his outstanding batting performance.



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England and New Zealand set for ODI series with Stokes back and Brook debate a major subplot https://artifex.news/article67282622-ece/ Thu, 07 Sep 2023 23:16:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article67282622-ece/ Read More “England and New Zealand set for ODI series with Stokes back and Brook debate a major subplot” »

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England’s Ben Stokes, centre, reacts to a ball thrown back towards him, during a nets session at Sophia Gardens, in Cardiff on September 7, 2023, ahead of their one-day international cricket match against New Zealand on Friday.
| Photo Credit: AP

England and New Zealand are preparing to meet on the one-day international stage for the first time since their wild, never-to-be-forgotten Cricket World Cup final more than four years ago.

This time, it is in the calmer surroundings of a four-match series serving as a warmup for the World Cup starting in India next month.

Still, there’s plenty riding on it.

Just ask Harry Brook.

In a surprise and arguably premature selection, Brook — one of England’s most explosive batters — was left out of the provisional 15-man squad for the World Cup that was announced in mid-August. A preference for more versatile middle-order batters such as Dawid Malan and Liam Livingstone was the reason given by selector Luke Wright.

How Brook has made the team’s leadership squirm.

In his next three innings, he has smashed a 42-ball 105 not out in The Hundred competition before an unbeaten 43 and then 67 in the first two matches of the Twenty20 series against New Zealand.

It came as little surprise that England white-ball coach Matthew Mott suddenly left the door open to last-minute changes to the World Cup squad. Brook was added on Wednesday to the group for the ODI series against New Zealand starting in Cardiff on Friday.

In theory, he has been drafted in as cover, with Jonny Bairstow a doubt with pain in his right shoulder sustained in the fourth T20 against New Zealand, won by the tourists to tie the series at 2-2.

A couple of others might be sweating on World Cup places, too. Malan appears the most vulnerable of the specialist batters, while the form of allrounder Liam Livingstone — as big a hitter as Brook, but less reliable — has started to come under scrutiny.

Ben Stokes, who is back in the ODI team after reversing his decision to retire from the 50-over format, had some glowing words for Brook on Thursday, further enhancing his case for World Cup selection.

“Harry has been in incredible form over the last 18 months in all formats for England,” said Stokes, who captains Brook in England’s test team. “Everyone is aware of how good a player he is.

“It’s obvious he is going to be around every England squad for the next 5-10 years so it’s good to see him now transitioning his form that we’ve seen in the whites to the colors for England.”

Without naming names, Stokes said some players will feel under pressure for their places going into this series.

“That’s the reality of being in a very strong team — and we are a very strong team, we know that,” he said. “Competition for places is the best possible thing for us as individuals and as a team. I’m sure a lot of final decisions will potentially be made around some of the form that the lads show in the series.”

Stokes hasn’t played since the Ashes and therefore since he was enticed back to ODIs by the prospect of winning back-to-back World Cups, having played a huge role in that victory over New Zealand at Lord’s four years ago.

“The closer and closer it got,” he said, “I started thinking differently about (being retired from ODIs), and going to India and trying to defend the World Cup was obviously a big reason for saying I’m available for selection.”

New Zealand doesn’t name its World Cup squad until Monday, and the team had good news this week when captain Kane Williamson was declared fit enough to be included after injuring his knee in the Indian Premier League.

Williamson has made sufficient progress in his recovery, although he may not be fit enough to play New Zealand’s first match of the tournament.



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