England captain Harry Brook was at his brilliant best in the first One Day International (ODI) between England and New Zealand, played on Sunday at the Bay Oval in Mount Maunganui. It was the opening match of the three-game ODI series, and Brook’s knock turned what seemed destined to be another English collapse into a memorable fightback.

With his stellar performance, Brook rescued his team from embarrassment and defeat after England’s star-studded top order crumbled. The visitors were reeling at 10 for 4, their batting lineup in tatters. Then came Brook to the crease, calm and composed, and he turned the tables on his opponents with a scintillating century that lifted England to a competitive total. England’s recovery from 33 for 5 to eventually finish on 223 was nothing short of historic.

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After winning the toss, New Zealand captain Mitchell Santner elected to bowl first on a day that seemed tailor-made for swing bowling. The cool coastal breeze, typical of Mount Maunganui, helped the Kiwi seamers move the ball both ways, creating havoc for the English batters who looked clueless against the movement. Wickets fell like a pack of cards.

The scoreboard told a surreal story, almost mocking the expectations built around England’s celebrated batting order. The top order had been blown away, edges flying, stumps cartwheeling, and New Zealand fielders celebrating like hunters who had cornered their prey.

At that point, it appeared that England might even struggle to reach 150. The crowd sensed blood. The Kiwi bowlers, Matt Henry (2 wickets), Zakary Foulkes (4 wickets), and Jacob Duffy (3 wickets), were virtually unplayable, relentlessly exploiting every inch of movement the conditions offered.

Harry Brook fightback

Harry Brook began cautiously, leaving balls outside off stump, defending the straight ones, and refusing to be drawn into rash strokes. But when the opportunity arose, he struck with precision, a punch through the covers here, a loft over mid-on there. Each stroke was a quiet declaration that England would not go down without a fight.

As the innings progressed, Brook found an able ally in Jamie Overton. Jamie scored 46 crucial runs. Together, they began the long climb out of disaster. Their partnership wasn’t built on flair but on discipline and determination. It was patient, deliberate, and anchored in an unspoken understanding that survival came first and flourish later.

The pair rotated the strike cleverly and punished anything short or wide. Gradually, Brook began to open up. In the 25th over, he launched a calculated assault on Santner’s spin, sending the ball racing to the boundary. With every clean hit, the silence that had engulfed the English dressing room began to lift.

By the time Brook reached his fifty, the transformation was complete. What had started as a desperate rescue act had become a statement of intent. He went on to play one of the most commanding ODI innings by an English captain in recent memory, an extraordinary 135, decorated with 11 sixes.

Brook paced his innings beautifully, adapting to the pitch that offered little mercy to reckless shot-making. His control against both pace and spin was exemplary: forward defenses when needed, late cuts and flicks when gaps opened. It was an innings carved out of defiance, textbook technique married to ironclad temperament.

Under Brook’s leadership, England’s total of 223 was a triumph of resolve over circumstance, a far cry from the calamity that loomed when they were four down for ten. As the team walked back to the pavilion, there was a palpable shift in momentum. It wasn’t a huge total, but it was a fighting one, built entirely on belief and that belief stemmed from Brook’s knock.

He had arrived at the crease with England tottering at 4 for 2 in the second over, survived as the side stumbled further to 56 for 6, and batted through to the end of the innings for his second ODI century and his highest one-day international score.

Brook’s innings was not just about runs, it was about resilience. He absorbed pressure, rebuilt an innings from ruins, and led by example. It was the kind of performance that reminds the cricketing world why Harry Brook is fast emerging as England’s next great all-format anchor, a player capable of carrying the team on his shoulders when the chips are down.

Till the filing of this report, New Zealand was 121 for 4 in 21 overs.

The New Zealand Vs England, 1st ODI match will be streamed live on the SonyLIV app and website.

New Zealand Vs England, 1st ODI: Squads

England Squad: Jamie Smith, Ben Duckett, Joe Root, Jacob Bethell, Harry Brook(c), Jos Buttler(w), Sam Curran, Jamie Overton, Sonny Baker, Brydon Carse, Adil Rashid, Luke Wood, Jofra Archer, Tom Banton, Rehan Ahmed, Liam Dawson

New Zealand Squad: Will Young, Devon Conway, Kane Williamson, Rachin Ravindra, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Latham(w), Michael Bracewell, Mitchell Santner(c), Zakary Foulkes, Jacob Duffy, Matt Henry, Mark Chapman, Nathan Smith

Most sixes by an England batter in an ODI innings

17 – Eoin Morgan vs Afghanistan in Manchester, 2019

14 – Jos Buttler vs Netherlands in Amstelveen, 2022

12 – Jos Buttler vs West Indies in St George’s, 2019

11 – Harry Brook vs New Zealand in Mount Maunganui, 2025

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