CricPage Editorial

Joe Root Leads England in ENG vs NZ 2nd Test 2026 as Stokes Controversy Rocks the Kia Oval

The ENG vs NZ 2nd Test 2026 at the Kia Oval, London, has taken on a life of its own even before a ball is bowled. Ben Stokes, England’s transformational Test captain, has been left out of the squad following an ECB investigation into an alleged breach of team protocols — and in his place.

Joe Root leads England in ENG vs NZ 2nd Test 2026 at Kia Oval as Ben Stokes misses out

Joe Root takes charge as England captain for the 2nd Test vs New Zealand at the Kia Oval — his first time leading the side since 2022 • ECB.

Joe Root will captain England for the first time in over three years. It is a plot twist that few could have scripted: England, carrying a 1-0 series lead, suddenly without their talisman, their enforcer and the man who rebuilt Test cricket’s relationship with the paying public.

New Zealand, battered in the 1st Test, arrive at the Oval with a genuine window. Root’s return to the captaincy is historic and fascinating, but it also throws England’s preparations into unfamiliar territory. Meanwhile, two debutants — Jordan Cox and Sonny Baker — are set to make their first Test appearances, and Jofra Archer returns to the fold. The 2nd Test kicks off Wednesday, 17 June 2026 at 11:00 AM IST (10:00 AM BST) and every session will matter.

The Stokes Saga: What England Lose and What Root Brings Back

Ben Stokes’ omission from this Test is not merely a selection decision — it is the dominant story in English cricket right now. The ECB confirmed it is investigating reports that Stokes and Gus Atkinson were at a nightclub in the early hours of Monday morning following the 1st Test win. Both players have been stood down while the investigation runs its course. Atkinson, who was among England’s best performers at Headingley, is also absent.

For all the disruption, Joe Root is no ordinary stand-in. Root captained England 64 times in Tests, more than any England captain in history, and led them through both the darkest years (2019–2021) and the early glow of ‘Bazball’. His batting form since relinquishing the captaincy has been extraordinary — over 4,000 runs in his last 50 Test innings at an average above 60. The question is not whether Root can bat; it is whether leading again shifts that headspace.

New Zealand know Root the batsman too well. His 153 in the Headingley win was a reminder that he remains England’s single most important run-scorer. If the burden of captaincy affects his output even marginally, New Zealand’s bowlers will target that pressure point relentlessly across five days at the Oval.

Ollie Robinson’s late withdrawal with a right knee issue adds a further layer of concern. England are also navigating the debut of Sonny Baker, the Yorkshire quick who was included in the squad’s wider thinking but now finds himself in a starting XI. Jordan Cox, the Kent wicketkeeper-batter, is another uncapped face in what is an unusually reshaped lineup.

New Zealand, by contrast, come in with clarity. They were beaten convincingly at Headingley but their bowling attack, led by Matt Henry and Tim Southee — operating in what could be Southee’s final England tour — will relish the Oval’s conditions. The pitch at Kennington traditionally flattens out on days three to five, rewarding patience from both batters and seamers who hit the seam rather than look for swing.

England vs New Zealand 2nd Test: Playing XIs

England XI: Joe Root (c), Ben Duckett, Jacob Bethell, Harry Brook, Zak Crawley — wait, Root is captain, so the order adjusts. The confirmed XI reads: Root (c), Duckett, Gay, Bethell, Brook, Smith (wk), Rew, Jordan Cox, Jofra Archer, Olly Stone or Tongue, Rehan Ahmed, with Sonny Baker and Matthew Fisher returning.

New Zealand XI: Tom Latham, Will Young, Kane Williamson, Daryl Mitchell, Tom Blundell (wk), Glenn Phillips, Michael Bracewell, Matt Henry, Tim Southee, Neil Wagner, Ajaz Patel. New Zealand’s leadership under Tom Latham is settled, and their experienced core gives them a structure England are currently scrambling to reassemble.

England vs New Zealand Head-to-Head in Tests: All-Time Record

England vs New Zealand — All-Time Test Series Record
Series / TournamentSeasonWinnerMargin
New Zealand in England Test Series, 19311931England1–0 (3)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 19371937England1–0 (3)
England in New Zealand Test Match, 1946/471946/47Drawn0–0 (1)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 19491949Drawn0–0 (4)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1950/511950/51England1–0 (2)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1954/551954/55England2–0 (2)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 19581958England4–0 (5)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1958/591958/59England1–0 (2)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 19651965England3–0 (3)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 19691969England2–0 (3)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1970/711970/71England1–0 (2)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1974/751974/75Drawn1–1 (3)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1977/781977/78Drawn1–1 (3)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 19831983England3–1 (4)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1983/841983/84England1–0 (3)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 19861986New Zealand1–0 (3)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1987/881987/88Drawn0–0 (3)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1991/921991/92England2–0 (3)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 1996/971996/97England2–0 (3)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 19991999New Zealand2–1 (4)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 2001/022001/02Drawn1–1 (3)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 20042004England3–0 (3)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 2007/082007/08England2–1 (3)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 2012/132012/13Drawn0–0 (3)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 20152015Drawn1–1 (2)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 2017/182017/18New Zealand1–0 (2)
New Zealand in England Test Series, 20212021New Zealand1–0 (2)
England in New Zealand Test Series, 2022/232022/23Drawn1–1 (2)
Crowe-Thorpe Trophy [ENG in NZ], 2024/252024/25England2–1 (3)
Crowe-Thorpe Trophy [NZ in ENG], 2026 ★2026In progress — 2nd Test: Kia Oval, 17 June 2026
All-Time: England lead overall. Matches played: 100+ | England wins: 48 | New Zealand wins: 14 | Drawn: 32+

What to Expect: Pitch, Weather and Match Outlook

The Kia Oval surface has traditionally offered bowlers something on day one before flattening considerably. Conditions in London mid-June typically bring overcast skies in the morning — which could favour New Zealand’s seamers early. However, England’s pace attack, even in its reconfigured form, has the tools to be competitive.

Root’s captaincy will be tested not just tactically but in how he manages a side that has had its emotional anchor removed. Stokes was not just a captain — he was a mood-setter, an entertainer, a player who willed situations to change. Root’s leadership style is calmly analytical by comparison. Against a New Zealand side that will be organised and disciplined, that might actually suit England’s needs right now.

England are favourites, and rightly so. But this 2nd Test — starting Wednesday — has more subplot than most, and New Zealand, who have nothing to lose and everything to gain, will not make it easy. Expect Root to make a statement with the bat early, Jordan Cox to be tested against pace and Tim Southee to have his say in what could be a significant farewell summer.

ENG vs NZ Head-to-Head Stats (Tests)

Total Tests Played

107

England Wins

48

New Zealand Wins

14

Draws

45

Current Series

Crowe-Thorpe Trophy 2026 — England lead 1–0 after Headingley

New Zealand enter the 2nd Test with nothing to lose and everything to gain. Tom Latham’s side were beaten comprehensively at Headingley but their pace attack and spin options make them genuinely competitive at the Oval, particularly if they can exploit early morning conditions on day one.

England’s series lead, a remoulded batting order and a returning Jofra Archer give Root’s side a significant advantage. But the volatility of the Stokes situation, two debutants and the ever-reliable threat of Southee and Henry mean the 2nd Test at the Kia Oval will be anything but routine.

Key Match Context: Why This Test Is Bigger Than the Scoreline

England vs New Zealand Test series in 2026 carries extra weight. England are under the spotlight of the ECB investigation; New Zealand are under pressure to stay alive in the series. The Kia Oval, which last hosted a Test in 2023, has a proud history of producing decisive results. A New Zealand win here would level the series and set up a winner-takes-all 3rd Test — making every session at the Oval consequential.

New Zealand's Response: Key Players to Watch

Kane Williamson

Form: 72 & 38 in 1st Test (retired)

Tim Southee

Likely final England series

Matt Henry

Led NZ attack at Headingley

Tom Latham

Captain, opens batting

Glenn Phillips

All-round threat in middle-order

New Zealand’s best chance lies in making life difficult in the first session of day one. If they can take wickets early — particularly those of Duckett, who was England’s most aggressive batter at Headingley — they can put England under pressure before Root stabilises from No. 4. Williamson, who made runs in both innings of the 1st Test, will be central to whatever fight New Zealand put up with the bat.

More on England's Summer 2026

Stay across all the action from England’s Test summer, NZ tour fixtures, live scores and analysis as Root’s side aims to seal the series at the Kia Oval. What the Crowe-Thorpe Trophy 2026 Means for England’s Test Future.

5 Key Talking Points: ENG vs NZ 2nd Test 2026

England’s superiority in bilateral Test cricket against New Zealand is one of the clearest trends in the history of the format. In 107 Tests played between the two nations, England have won 48 to New Zealand’s 14, with 45 draws. That ratio — roughly 3.4 England wins for every New Zealand win — reflects both England’s historical home advantage and New Zealand’s gradual rise from a side that toured partly for the experience in the mid-20th century to a genuine Test force under Brendon McCullum and Kane Williamson. New Zealand’s wins in 2021 at Edgbaston and Lord’s represent their most authoritative performances in England, making the 2026 Crowe-Thorpe Trophy an important statement series for both sides.

1. Root Steps Up: The Captain England Never Quite Replaced

Joe Root’s return to the captaincy — even as a stand-in — is the defining subplot of this Test. Root held the role for 64 matches between 2017 and 2022, England’s longest-serving Test captain, before handing it to Ben Stokes. With Stokes absent under a cloud, Root inherits not just the armband but the pressure of a series already won at Headingley. Historically, Root as captain averages 43 with the bat compared to 57 without it — the cognitive load is real. Whether he can compartmentalise will be one of the most closely watched threads across five days at the Kia Oval.

2. The Stokes-Atkinson Incident: A Disciplinary Cloud Over English Cricket

The omission of Ben Stokes and Gus Atkinson following an ECB investigation into alleged protocol breaches after the Headingley Test has cast a shadow beyond the selection sheet. England’s Bazball era has been built on trust, freedom and a loosened team culture — the nightclub reports represent a collision between that ethos and the responsibilities of professional conduct. The ECB has been careful not to prejudice any outcome, but the absence of both players — one England’s most important captain in a generation, the other their leading seam option — is a visible consequence that will define the tone of this Test week.

3. The Kia Oval’s Dual Character: Why Conditions May Suit New Zealand

The Oval has long been a fortress for batsmen once it settles in, but its first-day surface under June conditions has historically offered lateral movement that suits an experienced seam attack. New Zealand, led by Matt Henry’s swing at Headingley, will fancy their chances in the first session. The Oval’s larger boundaries and characteristically brown outfield can also contain the kind of explosive stroke play that Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett bring — though once the pitch settles, England’s depth batting from Root down through Brook and Bethell will be formidable.

4. Southee’s England Swan Song: A Farewell Series That Could Define His Legacy

Tim Southee, New Zealand’s most-capped Test player with 107 Tests and 390+ wickets, is widely expected to be playing his final series in England. The Kia Oval could be his last Test on English soil — a ground where he has previously threatened England’s top order. New Zealand cricket’s relationship with English conditions stretches back to Richard Hadlee, and Southee’s potential farewell gives the 2nd Test an emotional dimension beyond the series scoreline. A five-wicket haul at the Oval would be a fitting bookend to a career built on relentless craft at the highest level.

5. Jofra Archer’s Return: England’s Pace Weapon Changes the Series Dynamic

Jofra Archer’s inclusion in the ENG vs NZ 2nd Test squad — his first home Test involvement since his comeback from elbow reconstruction — adds a dimension England have lacked for three years. Archer at the Kia Oval, his adopted home ground with Sussex connections nearby, brings not just pace but the psychological pressure his name alone generates in opposition dressing rooms. New Zealand’s middle order, anchored by Kane Williamson’s experience, will face a real examination against genuine 90mph+ pace on a ground where the short ball can be genuinely threatening early in an innings.

The England vs New Zealand Test series history paints a compelling picture ahead of the 2026 Crowe-Thorpe Trophy. While England dominate the all-time ledger comfortably, New Zealand have claimed four of the last seven series encounters — including their famous 2021 win when Stokes was absent for personal reasons. The current form reversal at Headingley in the 1st Test suggests England’s Bazball philosophy, even temporarily captained by Root, carries forward with authority.

Where the Series Really Stands Heading to the Oval

England arrive at the Kia Oval with the bigger squad, the better record and a 1-0 series lead, but this is not the formality the scoreline suggests. A side missing its captain and one of its first-choice seamers to an ongoing ECB investigation, fielding two uncapped players in conditions that have historically rewarded experienced seam attacks, is carrying more risk than England’s recent dominance over New Zealand implies. Root’s class with the bat is not in question; whether he can manage a dressing room operating under this level of scrutiny while still delivering the runs England need from him at No. 4 is the genuine unknown of this Test.

New Zealand’s route back into this series runs through exactly these gaps — early inroads against Duckett and Crawley, sustained pressure on Cox and Baker before either settles into Test cricket, and a heavy workload from Southee and Henry while the Oval surface still offers them something. If England’s batting depth holds and Archer’s pace adds the cutting edge the attack has lacked since his return, the head-to-head record and the series lead should be enough to see them through. If it doesn’t, a result that levels the Crowe-Thorpe Trophy at 1-1 will not be an upset — it will be the direct consequence of a week England spent managing a disciplinary crisis instead of preparing fully for a Test match.

FAQ: ENG vs NZ Test Series 2026

Joe Root is captaining England in the 2nd Test against New Zealand at the Kia Oval. Ben Stokes has been left out of the squad following an ECB investigation into an alleged breach of team protocols after the 1st Test.

Ben Stokes and Gus Atkinson have been stood down from the England squad while the ECB investigates reports that both players visited a nightclub in the early hours following the 1st Test win at Headingley. No disciplinary outcome has been announced yet.

The ENG vs NZ 2nd Test 2026 starts on Wednesday, 17 June 2026 at 11:00 AM IST (10:00 AM BST / 5:00 AM GMT). The venue is the Kia Oval (The Oval) in Kennington, London.

Jordan Cox (Kent, wicketkeeper-batter) and Sonny Baker (Yorkshire, fast bowler) are set to make their Test debuts in England’s XI for the 2nd Test against New Zealand at the Kia Oval.

England have historically dominated New Zealand in Test cricket. Their most recent series in England ended 3-0 to England in 2022. New Zealand’s last series win on English soil was in 1999. England lead the current 2026 series 1-0 heading into the 2nd Test.

The ENG vs NZ 2nd Test 2026 can be watched live in India on Star Sports Network channels and streamed on Disney+ Hotstar. Check your cable or satellite provider for the exact channel number.

Yes. Jofra Archer returns to England’s Test XI for the 2nd Test against New Zealand at the Kia Oval. Archer’s pace and bounce on a flatter Oval surface will be a key weapon for Root’s side.

The Kia Oval pitch typically offers movement for seamers on day one under overcast conditions but flattens out significantly from day three onwards. It generally produces high scores in the second half of a Test match, favouring patient batting sides.

Article Guide

What it means for England

The nightclub incident & ECB probe

England’s pace wildcard returns

CricPage Links

Fixtures, series and match times.

Team rankings and standings.

Selected Editorials

Squads, venue, weather and match setup.

Final preview and tactical notes.

Captaincy story from RCB season.

Long-view ODI context.