Ben Duckett – 5
Made starts in both innings and while he got a good ball in the first innings, will have been frustrated to fall playing a loose shot having reached 33 in the second.
Emilio Gay – 7
A very encouraging debut. Given a freebie to get of the mark in Test cricket, the left-hander fell to a beauty first time round before showing a good mix of skill and grit to make a game-high 57 and put England in a strong position.
Jacob Bethell – 4
After a poor dismissal on day one, there was better application from Bethell in the second and there was nothing he could do after a short-ish ball from Matt Henry scooted along the ground to hit his off stump.
Joe Root – 3
Something of a rarity: two single-figure scores in the same Test for England’s premier batter. Got two good balls but then most could say the same in this match.
Harry Brook – 7
Brook stayed true to Bazball with a counter-attacking half-century to drag England past 100 in the first innings, making the most of his luck after being dropped twice.
Jamie Smith – 6
Recovered from a poor leave that resulted in his off stump being flattened to help steady things after England had lost 4-1 in the second innings with a fluent, by the standards of the match, knock of 39. Tidy behind the stumps.
Ben Stokes – 4
A quiet Test for the skipper. It took a blinding catch from Kane Williamson to dismiss him first time around but he played around a straight one in the second innings. Bowled just seven overs in the match but did make a timely breakthrough to end New Zealand’s brief resistance on the last day.
Gus Atkinson – 8
England’s Lord’s expert. The seamer took a tidy 2-9 in the first innings and followed up with 5-30 in the second – his fourth five-wicket haul in three Tests at the home of cricket. A total of 26 wickets at 9.5 at this ground is quite remarkable.
Ollie Robinson – 8
A triple-wicket maiden in his first over after more than two years out of the side. Comebacks do not get much better. Robinson could not have asked for a pitch more suited to him and tougher challenges will come, but, with seven wickets in the Test, he couldn’t have done much more to show he is ready to lead the England attack.
Josh Tongue – 7
The third of three frontline seamers this week, perhaps, but another good showing from Tongue. He continues to uproot stumps at an impressive rate and of all the bowlers, his place in the side looks the most secure in the medium-to-long term.
Shoaib Bashir – 5
Back in the XI but Bashir bowled as many balls in this match as he did in the Ashes – zero. However, he made a Test-best 14 with the bat in a useful last-wicket stand in the first innings.