While Jonny Bairstow was the only English batter to truly excel, contributing 73 of their 175 runs, the Black Caps' quality ran deeper. Of England's top six only Bairstow scored at a strike rate above 150; of New Zealand's not one dipped below it, with Tim Seifert and Glenn Phillips falling within sniffing distance of half-centuries while Mark Chapman was denied one only by his team reaching their target before he could get to his own.
There were moments of good fortune - Phillips let out a cry of anguish as he top-edged a Brydon Carse delivery in the 13th over only for the ball to loop well past the boundary, and two balls later Chapman also edged one, along the ground this time, for four - but also some spectacular clean hitting on a night when few of England's plans came good.
One of them was for Jos Buttler to have a rest. Instead England's whiteball captain was forced to don the gloves as an injury substitute after Bairstow reported a mildly painful right shoulder during his innings. Thus even the Yorkshireman, England's one truly successful batter, had a night of mixed fortunes; many of his teammates did not even manage that.
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