Kane Williamson's 132 gave New Zealand a chance after following on, but England needs only 210 runs from 103 overs to win the second Test in Wellington
Match Report:
ScorecardSouthee strikes, Williamson ton sets England final day chase
Kane Williamson's 26th Test century has given New Zealand a fighting chance, setting England a fourth innings chase of 258 to win after following on.
Tom Blundell made 90 and was the last man out as the Black Caps' second innings ended at 483 less than an hour before stumps on Monday.
Under New Zealand-born coach Brendon McCullum, England have already achieved their highest successful Test run chase, scoring 378 to beat India at Edgbaston last year. This chase for 258 with more than 100 overs available would seem a walk in the park by comparison.
Tim Southee removed Zac Crawley (24) with a ball that cut back to hit off peg and at stumps on day four England were 1-48, needing 210 from 103 overs on the last day to sweep the two-match series.
Image Id: 8BFBD102683941D19B0A1FE5483B9F85 Image Caption: Kane Williamson celebrates his 26th Test century at Basin Reserve // GettyThe odds still heavily favour the visitors but Williamson at least gave New Zealand hope.
When he reached 29 on his way to 132, he became New Zealand's highest run-scorer in Tests, overtaking his former teammate Ross Taylor, who ended his career last year with 7682 runs.
And in batting for all of the fourth day, in productive partnerships with Henry Nicholls, Daryl Mitchell and Tom Blundell, Williamson guided New Zealand from a 226-run deficit when England enforced the follow-on on Sunday to a respectable lead.
"I don't think too much about records," Williamson said. "It's all about the team and the position you're in and trying to do more.
"It was nice to be part of some partnerships today and get a pretty good second innings effort on the board. Having said that, you always want more and we were hoping for a few more in terms of the position we got ourselves into. But all to play for tomorrow."
After making only 10 runs in his previous three innings in the series, Williamson showed why he is New Zealand's best batter when the chips are down.
The match was in the balance at the start of the day: New Zealand was 3-202, still 24 runs behind England, who had just taken the second new ball.
Williamson and Nicholls (29) erased the deficit by the ninth over and saw off the new ball in a partnership of 55 for the fourth wicket.
Image Id: 73EE4E506C8C49E3A35F208D4AABA466 Image Caption: Tom Blundell made 90 in a 158-run partnership with Williamson // GettyDaryl Mitchell came in when Williamson was 34 and rushed past him to a half century from 52 balls. Williamson then reached his own fifty, from 148 deliveries.
Mitchell was out for 54 in a 75-run partnership with Williamson, when New Zealand's lead was 71. Tom Blundell then provided Williamson the extended support he needed to gradually improve New Zealand's position.
Williamson had batted for seven-and-a-half hours when England gave Harry Brook – primarily a batter but also officially listed as a medium pacer – his first bowl in Test cricket.
He snared the prized wicket, through a faint edge down the leg side to wicketkeeper Ben Foakes, who completed a fine catch up to the stumps.
When Williamson was out, New Zealand's resistance was broken and the end came quickly.