Key events
Show key events only
Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
1st over: New Zealand 9-0 (Seifert 9, Robinson 0) Wood starts an inswinger and a dot, as Seifert clips to midwicket. Then another inswinger, nudged for a single. The last ball is the first faced by Tim Robinson. It goes straight on outside off and he gets behind it but can’t pierce the field.
That’s a good comeback from Wood. It was an over of two halves, an hour and a half apart.
Share
The ball is back in the hands of Luke Wood, who looks as chipper as ever despite going for eight runs off three balls.
Share
It’s not a whole different ballgame, but the powerplay will now be 25 balls. We’ve had three of them, which means the next 22 balls should be worth watching.
Share
Match reduced to 14 overs a side
We’re going to have a 14-over match, resuming at 8.50pm local time. If I’ve got the maths right, that’s in about three minutes’ time.
Share
Updated at 03.50 EDT
The umps are holding that promised inspection. As Neil Wagner notes, they could just look at the England players, who are doing their warm-ups on the outfield, silently proving that it’s safe to run around on.
Share
By the way, this weather isn’t unseasonal. The cricket is.
Share
The umpires have let it be known … that they will hold another inspection in ten minutes. Groan.
Share
The umpires are out there, studying the outfield as the covers come off. “They’ve got their umbrellas up,” says a commentator. “No need for that, it’s not raining!”
Share
More than a glimmer
Another update from Simon Burnton, our tireless correspondent. “It has just stopped raining!”
Share
A glimmer of hope
“It’s actually got a bit lighter,” says Simon. “There was just a loud cheer from the crowd, who are all sheltering in the concourses, because they thought it had stopped (it hadn’t).”
That sentence has a lot to say about cricket.
Share
Two of our threads now come together. Another email from Simon Burnton, another thought about Tims.
“Don’t forget the noted Australian confectioner Tim Tam.
“Sorry.”
No need to be sorry, Simon. Tim Tam is a legend, right up there with Tim Berners-Lee. Meanwhile, in the literary section of heaven, Martin Amis breaks off from a chat with Jane Austen to realise that he may have seriously underestimated the Tims.
Share
A swirling curtain of drizzly muck … and Coldplay
My plea for an email has evidently reached Simon Burnton, who sends another postcard from the ground. “It’s quite dramatic rain, this,” he says. “Not a full-on downpour, but a swirling curtain of drizzly muck. It seems particularly cruel given there was basically no rain today – a few minutes of light stuff at 10ish this morning – until 7.17pm, two minutes after this game started.” That’s cricket for you.
“I think the most striking thing about Eden Park is the amount of Coldplay memorabilia strewn about the place, after the band played three nights here last November – including their actual piano, which is loitering in reception. Do they leave a different piano at every venue they play? Is this not littering? If I leave my unwanted stuff behind I generally get told off for it.” Ha. They’ll probably be back soon to pick it up. That tour has been going on for four years and it’s not finished yet.
Share
Updated at 03.05 EDT
In the meantime, we need to talk about Tim. Tim Seifert and Tim Robinson: are they the first pair of Tims to open the batting together in international cricket? Tim Robinson, of course, is not the first Tim Robinson to be an international opener, though he is definitely the liveliest. The Tims, they are a-changing.
When Tim Henman was at his peak, regularly losing in the semi-finals at Wimbledon, Martin Amis wrote about him in his capacity as the tennis correspondent of the New Yorker. The piece was mostly about being called Tim. Nobody called Tim, Amis declared, had ever achieved anything memorable. Amis was a fabulous journalist as well as a formidable novelist, but he missed a trick here. This was in the mid-Nineties, when, unbeknown to Amis, the most significant invention of the age had already come along: the worldwide web, pioneered by Tim Berners-Lee.
Share
Updated at 03.01 EDT
If you’ve ever thought about sending an email to the OBO, now might be a good time. It doesn’t even have to be about the Ashes.
Share
An email comes in from our old friend Tom van der Gucht, who is looking ahead. “I have been thinking a bit recently about the build-up to the Ashes and England’s warm up game against England A… This has the potential to be both exciting and have some thrilling sub-plots if not for the make-up of the Ashes team, but for future England squads.
“Looking back to before the 2010 T20 World Cup, England completely ripped up their plans and jettisoned Trott and Denly for Kieswetter and Lumb – the rest was history.
“if any of the Lions roar. Crawley, Pope and possibly even Bethell could see themselves being leapfrogged if they suffer a lean series. Also, it’s a chance for Flintoff to ink his name in as McCullum’s successor… Fredball!”
This may be the earliest on any Ashes tour that anyone has ever called for wholesale changes. “Send ’em home!”
Share
Say what you like about the rain, it’s allowing viewers in the UK to have their breakfast. I’m sitting here like Paddington Bear, tucking into the marmalade. TNT Sports have switched to highlights of the last game between these two sides, which suggests that a resumption is less than imminent.
Share
Rain stops play! NZ 8-0 off 0.3 overs
Here we go! That’s tough on the two Tims, who had made a rollicking start.
Share
After three balls: NZ 8-0 (Seifert 8, Robinson 0) Wood’s first ball is an inswinger that swings all the way to the square-leg boundary, with an easy nudge from Tim Seifert. The second ball is a dot, and the third is another four – a full toss, thumped through the covers. But then …
Share
The players are out there and Luke Wood has another job: to open the bowling. Can he make the new ball talk?
Share
Simon even sends a PS. “Update: Luke Wood gave a speech to mark Salt’s 50th cap, which is what he was being congratulated for.”
Share
Heartening to hear Simon say only “a chance of rain”. It felt like a bit more than that in his piece from yesterday …
Share
The word from the ground
“Morning/evening/whatever from Auckland!” says Simon Burnton, our correspondent on the tour. “First, weatherwatch: yesterday it drizzled all day and while today has been dry (so far, there’s a chance of rain later), it was outrageously windy as I did the rather dreary walk here from town. England are unchanged, with Phil Salt collecting a commemorative cap in the team’s pre-match huddle on the occasion of his 50th T20 appearance (they really need to make some more effort with these special caps, because they are absolutely identical to the standard ones which makes it hard to see what the point is), and Luke Wood, who is making his 14th appearance, also getting congratulated for a reason I was unable to ascertain from a distance.”
From a distance, eh: the story of the OBO’s life.
Share
Teams in full
New Zealand 1 Tim Seifert (wk), 2 Tim Robinson, 3 Rachin Ravindra, 4 Mark Chapman, 5 Daryl Mitchell, 6 Michael Bracewell, 7 Jimmy Neesham, 8 Michell Santner (capt), 9 Zak Foulkes, 10 Matt Henry, 11 Jacob Duffy.
England 1 Phil Salt, 2 Jos Buttler (wk), 3 Jacob Bethell, 4 Harry Brook (capt), 5 Sam Curran, 6 Tom Banton, 7 Jordan Cox, 8 Liam Dawson, 9 Brydon Carse, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Luke Wood.
Share
Teams in brief
England stick with a winning team. New Zealand make one change to their bowling, replacing big Kyle Jamieson with not-quite-so-big Zak Foulkes.
Share
Updated at 01.59 EDT
England win the toss and bowl first
When there’s rain around, you bat second. Harry Brook is often unorthodox, but not that unorthodox.
Share
Preamble
Morning everyone, evening everyone else, and welcome to the decider in this Twenty20 series. A New Zealand win, the one realistic result we haven’t had so far, will mean the spoils are shared, which would seem fair after NZ had the better of the washout in the first game. But any other result here will hand the series to England – and that includes no result, which is rearing its soggy head again.
In Auckland tonight, as in Christchurch last Saturday, there’s a whole lot of rain forecast for the second half of the evening. Common sense might be gently suggesting that this should be a 10-over game from the start. Half the point of white-ball cricket, after all, is to have a winner before bedtime. But, as we all know, there are parts of cricket that common sense cannot reach.
For England and their novice captain Harry Brook, a win (or even a washout) would confirm the suspicion that they have remembered how to play T20. For New Zealand and the far more seasoned Mitchell Santner, it would show that they have never forgotten. If you go by results over the past year, England’s win the other night nudged them ahead of NZ. They now have 12 wins to NZ’s 11, while both have six defeats – and two washouts. Here’s hoping they don’t add to that last figure.
Play starts at 7.15am (UK time), all being well, and I’ll be back soon with news of the toss and the teams.
Share
Updated at 01.50 EDT