Jamie Overton was refreshingly philosophical at the end of day three of the third Test at Headingley, after falling agonizingly short of a Test century on debut before returning with a fiery spell in the final session. Jonny Bairstow smashed a magnificent 162 while Jamie Overton fell three runs short of a century as England was dismissed for 360 in their first innings for a 31-run lead.
Both efforts contributed to England’s cause, ensuring first innings of 360 for a lead of 31, before cutting New Zealand down to 168 for five late on. The tourists led by 137 at stumps, with in-form batters Daryl Mitchell and Tom Blundell at the crease.
Jamie Overton Was Disappointed After Getting Dismissed On 97 But Thinks He Has Contributed Enough
Jamie Overton came out again after an initial spell of five overs for 17 after Tea and immediately took the wicket of Tom Latham, who had looked back in form in reaching 76 before succumbing to a misjudgment outside off stump from round the wicket. Jamie Overton then hit Devon Conway in the head with the very next ball, setting the tone for what was an engaging four-wicket session for England.
However, the pain earlier of falling for 97 (3 runs short of a ton) earlier in the day was the main point of conversation when it came to Jamie Overton’s work on Saturday. He was crestfallen after nervously waving at a wide delivery from Kiwi pacer Trent Boult which nestled into the hands of Daryl Mitchell at first slip. By stumps, however, he had just about made his peace with the three runs he did not get.
“Obviously I was very disappointed getting out on 97,” he said. “But me and Jonny put us in a great position [a partnership of 241 – a new record for the seventh wicket]. And that knock from Broady (42) coming in and getting us into a lead has put us in a great place going into the second innings. It was obviously disappointing but I feel I’ve contributed to the team more than enough.”
Understandably, Jamie Overton did not get the best night’s sleep on Friday, having come in on 89 not out, and that was reflected in a quiet start the following morning, in which he only managed eight runs in the 40 minutes before his dismissal.
“I was tossing and turning for quite a lot,” he admitted. “I’m always going to be a little bit nervous but I felt like I was a sort of in a great place this morning and just didn’t quite get over the line. The ball was there to hit and I just hit it to the wrong place.”
Jonny Bairstow, who was eventually dismissed for 162, accompanied Jamie Overton for a portion of his slow walk-off, putting his arm around him and offering some consoling words: “He just said, soak it all up, you played a great knock.”
Jonny Bairstow and Jamie Overton came together with England at 6-55 and their brilliant rescue act resulted in a 241-run partnership for the seventh wicket to keep the hosts afloat.
Jamie Overton: The Last Session Has Put England In The Driver’s Seat And The Two Key Wickets Of Tom Blundell And Daryl Mitchell Should Be Picked Early On Day 4
Jamie Overton was good by those words come the evening. England’s middle session lacked a little something, allowing New Zealand to move into a strong position of 125 for one at tea, and a lead of 94. With the help of the crowd, they responded with far more urgency and endeavour to take four for 43 in the 18.5 overs they were able to get in before the rain intervened.
“We chatted at tea that potentially the afternoon session wasn’t that great for us,” Overton said. “We obviously didn’t go for loads of runs but we didn’t feel like we bowled and fielded the way we wanted to, so coming out after tea it was just trying to enjoy ourselves, put the New Zealand guys under pressure, and that’s what we did. The crowd obviously got involved a little bit and we tried to get them up because that always helps us as well.”
There is still work to be done, especially given how the pair at the crease- Daryl Mitchell and Tom Blundell have performed – in this match alone, never mind the series, with 109 and 55 in the first innings, respectively. Jamie Overton, though, feels England is ahead.
“I think that last session put us right in the box seat. We would like to go back out there at the end but couldn’t quite get out there with the covers needing time to get them off. But yeah, we’re in a great position going into tomorrow and hopefully we can get the two early wickets, the two key wickets. But we feel like we’re in a good place. And if we can get those two early, then we’re in a great place to win the game.”
England’s bowlers struck three times in quick succession late on day three to take control of the final Test against New Zealand at Headingley and stay on course for a 3-0 series sweep. The tourists were on 5-168 at the close on Saturday, leading England by 137 when rain brought a premature halt to the day’s play.
New Zealand got off to a promising start in their second innings thanks to a fluent half-century from Tom Latham (76) but lost their way after the opener was dismissed by debutant Jamie Overton (1-34) off the first ball after tea.
Close New Zealand 329 (Mitchell 109, Blundell 55, Leach 5-100) and 168 for 6 (Latham 76, Williamson 48) lead England 360 (Bairstow 162, Overton 97) by 137 runs