By Tim de Lisle • June 7, 2026 • Sport

Over-by-over report: After a near-washout on Saturday, can England take the last five New Zealand wickets to win the 150th Lord’s Test?
Morning everyone and welcome to a Test that has somehow dribbled into a fourth day. We’ve had a wicket roughly every four overs, but the rain gods have allowed only five sessions’ play. England are well on top, yet they could still lose. They need to take five more wickets before New Zealand score 199 more runs. So far, between the showers, the New Zealanders have managed only 168 for 15 wickets, so 199 for four may sound like a stretch. But there’s more batting left than you might think because they sent in a nightwatchman, way back on Friday evening. They’ve got an opener, Devon Conway, who’s still there and who made 200 on his Test debut at Lord’s. He may have added only 23, 3, 13, 1 and 19* at this address since, but that could mean that he’s overdue another big one. And the two men who bashed most of the runs in NZ’s first innings, Glenn Phillips and Kyle Jamieson, are still to come. It’s as if their captain, Tom Latham, has done by accident what Don Bradman once did deliberately and got the batting order the wrong way up. On a pitch that has been dry, uneven and widely derided, England’s bowlers have only had to look at the off bail to be lethal. Ollie Robinson, when he switched to the Nursery End yesterday and Jamie Smith stood up to the stumps, promptly took two wickets in four balls. He has seven for 57 in the match, Gus Atkinson four for 25, Josh Tongue four for 55. Only Ben Stokes (none for 22) has been firing blanks. Robinson has never taken eight wickets in a Test, let alone ten, so he will still be hungry today, and the chances are that he, Atkinson and Tongue will finish the job. But a low-scoring match can be won by one fearless knock, as England found in the last first Test they played, at Perth, when Travis Head beat them at their own game. So you never know. Play resumes at 11am BST and the forecast, thankfully, is as dry as the pitch.
Source: The Guardian





