Swann spins hosts towards win
Graeme Swann caused New Zealand yet more trouble as England eyed victory, and a 2-0 series win, in the second and final Test at Headingley on Monday.
New Zealand were 68 for three at tea on the fourth day, still needing a further 400 runs to reach their huge victory target of 468.
The most any side has ever made in the fourth innings to win a Test is West Indies’ 418/7 against Australia in Antigua in 2002/03.
And the corresponding record for New Zealand is the 325/4 they posted against Pakistan in Christchurch in 1993/94.
In the first innings of this match New Zealand collapsed to 174 — although this was an improvement on the 68 they managed in the second innings of their 170-run first Test loss at Lord’s.
Stuart Broad, who took a Test-best seven for 44 at Lord’s, removed struggling opener Peter Fulton for five on Monday after the tall batsman could only fend a rising delivery to Ian Bell in the gully.
New Zealand were then 21/1.
Off-spinner Swann, who’d taken four wickets in New Zealand’s first innings, needed just nine balls to strike again Monday when Kane Williamson was lbw for three.
New Zealand reviewed the decision but with replays showing the ball would have clipped leg stump, Australian umpire Steve Davis’s decision was upheld.
Swann then grabbed his second wicket in three overs when left-handed opener Hamish Rutherford was caught off bat and pad by Joe Root at short leg.
Rutherford’s 42 had taken just 51 balls, including six fours, but New Zealand were now 65/3.
Earlier, England captain Alastair Cook scored 130, further extending his England record for Test centuries to 25, before declaring the hosts’ second innings on 287/5 shortly after lunch.
England resumed Monday on 116/1, with left-handed opener Cook 88 not out and Jonathan Trott unbeaten on 11.
New Zealand took the field missing Trent Boult, who took five first innings wickets, after the left-arm quick was ruled out with a side strain aggravated on Sunday.
Cook, still only aged 28 and in his 92nd match at this level, completed his hundred with a cover-driven boundary off Tim Southee, his 15th four in 152 balls.
Trott, who had faced 69 balls for his overnight score of 11 not out, upped his own run-rate and after being dropped off a difficult slip chance on 40, went on to make a 126-ball fifty.
Part-time off-spinner Willamson took two wickets in eight balls as Cook got a leading edge to mid-off and Bell holed out on the slog sweep.
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