<p>Matt Henry struck twice on his return to international cricket as a much-changed New Zealand reduced England to 152-4 at tea on the first day of the second Test at Edgbaston on Thursday.</p>.<p>England, who had been 72-0, lost three wickets for 13 runs shortly after lunch as they slumped to 85-3, with captain Joe Root out for just four.</p>.<p>But opener Rory Burns, fresh from his hundred in the drawn first Test at Lord's last week, was still there on 73 not out.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/cricket/england-bat-against-new-zealand-in-second-test-as-anderson-sets-record-995962.html" target="_blank">England bat against New Zealand in second Test as Anderson sets record</a></strong></p>.<p>Henry, one of six changes to New Zealand's side, deserved his interval figures of 2-36 in 13 overs.</p>.<p>The paceman, in for the veteran Tim Southee -- one of three New Zealand players rested ahead of next week's inaugural World Test Championship final against India at Southampton -- started the slump.</p>.<p>Dom Sibley tried to leave a Henry away-swinger but was caught behind for 35.</p>.<p>England's 72-1 became 73-2 when Zak Crawley's miserable run continued with a duck, the batsman caught in the slips after a loose shot off left-arm paceman Neil Wagner -- the only surviving member of New Zealand's attack from Lord's.</p>.<p>It was Crawley's ninth single-figure score in 11 Test innings since his stunning 267 against Pakistan last year.</p>.<p>Henry then captured the prize wicket of key batsman Root, caught behind off an excellent outswinger that moved late.</p>.<p>Root had won the toss and batted despite overcast conditions that appeared to favour his attack, once again without a specialist spinner.</p>.<p>New Zealand had to make three injury-enforced changes, with captain and key batsman Kane Williamson (elbow), spinner Mitchell Santner (cut finger) and BJ Watling (sore back) all missing from the side.</p>.<p>Their places were taken by Will Young, Ajaz Patel and Tom Blundell respectively, with Tom Latham captaining the team.</p>.<p>Patel and wicket-keeper Blundell then combined when Ollie Pope (19) was caught behind edging an intended cut off the left-arm spinner.</p>.<p>Experienced left-arm seamer Trent Boult, back in the team after family leave, was wicketless after conceding a mere 28 runs in 14 overs.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, James Anderson's 162nd appearance saw him become England's most-capped Test player, breaking the record he had shared with retired former captain Alastair Cook.</p>.<p>England made one change, with fast bowler Olly Stone replacing Ollie Robinson who, following a successful on-field Test debut at Lord's, was suspended from international cricket after the emergence of historic racist and sexist Twitter posts.</p>.<p>Despite the furore over Robinson's tweets, both teams again stood for a 'moment of unity' before play designed to show their opposition to discrimination within cricket.</p>.<p>And they were roared on to the field by a crowd of some 17,000 -- two-thirds of Edgbaston's capacity -- as part of the British Government's easing of coronavirus restrictions.</p>
<p>Matt Henry struck twice on his return to international cricket as a much-changed New Zealand reduced England to 152-4 at tea on the first day of the second Test at Edgbaston on Thursday.</p>.<p>England, who had been 72-0, lost three wickets for 13 runs shortly after lunch as they slumped to 85-3, with captain Joe Root out for just four.</p>.<p>But opener Rory Burns, fresh from his hundred in the drawn first Test at Lord's last week, was still there on 73 not out.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/cricket/england-bat-against-new-zealand-in-second-test-as-anderson-sets-record-995962.html" target="_blank">England bat against New Zealand in second Test as Anderson sets record</a></strong></p>.<p>Henry, one of six changes to New Zealand's side, deserved his interval figures of 2-36 in 13 overs.</p>.<p>The paceman, in for the veteran Tim Southee -- one of three New Zealand players rested ahead of next week's inaugural World Test Championship final against India at Southampton -- started the slump.</p>.<p>Dom Sibley tried to leave a Henry away-swinger but was caught behind for 35.</p>.<p>England's 72-1 became 73-2 when Zak Crawley's miserable run continued with a duck, the batsman caught in the slips after a loose shot off left-arm paceman Neil Wagner -- the only surviving member of New Zealand's attack from Lord's.</p>.<p>It was Crawley's ninth single-figure score in 11 Test innings since his stunning 267 against Pakistan last year.</p>.<p>Henry then captured the prize wicket of key batsman Root, caught behind off an excellent outswinger that moved late.</p>.<p>Root had won the toss and batted despite overcast conditions that appeared to favour his attack, once again without a specialist spinner.</p>.<p>New Zealand had to make three injury-enforced changes, with captain and key batsman Kane Williamson (elbow), spinner Mitchell Santner (cut finger) and BJ Watling (sore back) all missing from the side.</p>.<p>Their places were taken by Will Young, Ajaz Patel and Tom Blundell respectively, with Tom Latham captaining the team.</p>.<p>Patel and wicket-keeper Blundell then combined when Ollie Pope (19) was caught behind edging an intended cut off the left-arm spinner.</p>.<p>Experienced left-arm seamer Trent Boult, back in the team after family leave, was wicketless after conceding a mere 28 runs in 14 overs.</p>.<p>Meanwhile, James Anderson's 162nd appearance saw him become England's most-capped Test player, breaking the record he had shared with retired former captain Alastair Cook.</p>.<p>England made one change, with fast bowler Olly Stone replacing Ollie Robinson who, following a successful on-field Test debut at Lord's, was suspended from international cricket after the emergence of historic racist and sexist Twitter posts.</p>.<p>Despite the furore over Robinson's tweets, both teams again stood for a 'moment of unity' before play designed to show their opposition to discrimination within cricket.</p>.<p>And they were roared on to the field by a crowd of some 17,000 -- two-thirds of Edgbaston's capacity -- as part of the British Government's easing of coronavirus restrictions.</p>