England 140 (Brook 56, Jamieson 5-62) and 226 (Gay 57, Smith 6-70) beat New Zealand 113 (Robinson 5-39) and 138 (Atkinson 5-30) by 115 runs
Atkinson took the last three wickets to seal England’s win but it was Josh Tongue who struck first, pinning Tom Blundell lbw with a ball that kept low from a good length in the first full over of the day. Phillips was worked over early in his innings – he edged just short of slip, then inside-edged a lifter for four – and quickly realised there was little point hanging around.
Conway looked a long way from the player who had piled on a double-hundred on Test debut here five years ago, struggling for rhythm as he battled hard to survive. His 53-run partnership with Phillips was the second-highest stand of the match, but ended tamely when he skewed Ben Stokes’ length ball into the gully, where Jacob Bethell took a sharp, low catch.
Atkinson then took over, overcoming a build-up interrupted by concussion to occasionally hit speeds of 90mph/145kph. He had Nathan Smith caught behind third ball, Kyle Jamieson chipping to short midwicket, and flattened Matt Henry’s middle stump as Phillips – whose 78 runs were the most in the match – got stuck at the non-striker’s end.
It extended Atkinson’s remarkable relationship with Lord’s. He took 12 wickets against West Indies to upstage James Anderson’s farewell on his debut two years ago, hit a hundred and took another five-wicket haul against Sri Lanka later that summer, and his latest five-for took his record at the ground to 26 wickets at 9.50 across six bowling innings.
Yet that was not enough to secure him the player-of-the-match award, which instead went to Robinson. On his England comeback after two-and-a-half years in the wilderness, Robinson returned career-best match figures of 7 for 77 and took his overall Test bowling average below 22. “I know that this is just the start,” he insisted.
England’s only concern was the result after their 4-1 hammering in Australia this winter, but they will know that this win proves very little. New Zealand have nine days to reflect before the second match of the series at The Oval on June 17, which is closely followed by the third and final Test at Trent Bridge on June 25.






