England hit back with some late wickets to earn a dramatic tie against New Zealand in Napier and keep the one-day series alive going into the final game.

Daniel Vettori needed two off the last ball to win the game and the series but could only manage one off Luke Wright.
New Zealand had looked like they would reach their target of 341, but Jamie How was out for 139 in the last over.
England's total of 340-6 was partly due to Paul Collingwood (54) hitting the fastest one-day fifty by an Englishman.
The incredible ending means England can still level the five-match series by winning at Christchurch on Saturday. New Zealand gave England the opportunity to bat first on a perfect pitch and the tourists responded by rattling up their third highest score in one-day internationals.


The out-of-form Alastair Cook was handed an early lifeline when wicket-keeper Brendon McCullum unbelievably dropped the most straightforward of chances.
England capitalised on their good fortune and while Phil Mustard blazed a trail of runs, Cook began to show his own class with some effective pulls and drives.
Mustard brought up his maiden one-day fifty with a typically risky chip over the vacant slip area for four and Cook followed soon after with a sumptuous extra-cover drive.
They both looked completely in control - until Vettori turned to the wildcard wiles of medium pacer Jesse Ryder. After an opening stand of 158, he tempted Mustard to hit to Jacob Oram on the long-on boundary and next ball, after the batsmen had crossed, he sneaked one through Cook's defences.


Suddenly England had to rebuild and Ian Bell and Kevin Pietersen did just that, the former finding the gaps expertly with some gorgeous square drives.
Bell looked in prime touch before he perished in the deep for 43, leaving Pietersen and skipper Collingwood to continue the assault.
Collingwood was simply brutal, stepping across to the offside and lashing anything he could get his bat on into the stands for six - even hammering debutant Iain O'Brien against the roof.
Pietersen (50) fell to Vettori and Shah was caught in the deep off the same bowler, but Collingwood and then Wright continued to plunder runs as the Kiwis toiled.
Collingwood finished with six sixes to his name after a violent display of hitting and the pressure was on New Zealand from the start of their innings to keep up with the massive run rate of 6.82.
Their cause was not helped when the wayward James Anderson rapped McCullum on the right hand and the Kiwi opener required treatment for a painful blow.
Ryder eased the pain by launching Anderson way into the crowd over long-on and then beautifully coaxing him through the covers for four next ball.
Anderson was plundered for 44 from his opening four-over spell, but partly made amends with a brilliant running catch to get rid of Ryder for 39 in the deep off Stuart Broad. Having looked at one stage as though he would have to retire, McCullum proceeded to step up the tempo, hammering Anderson to all parts of the ground and passing fifty soon after.


How had joined him and immediately looked at ease on the wicket, reaching his half-century by clubbing Collingwood into the legside crowd for two huge sixes.
Collingwood turned to the part-time off-spin of Shah - and he immediately came up trumps, seducing McCullum out of his crease and Mustard completed the stumping.
But How was in magnificent form and he continued on his merry way, capitalising on anything remotely short or wide with stunning efficiency as the Kiwis careered towards their unlikely target.
Ross Taylor joined the party to put on 92 in 13 overs with How, before the returning Anderson caught his outside edge to give England a late glimmer.
How blitzed his way to a maiden one-day hundred, before England cranked up the tempo and got rid of Scott Styris, Peter Fulton and Oram in a quickfire spell as tension got to the hosts. Wright was bizarrely picked to bowl the last over - his first in the match - and with seven needed for the Kiwis, How was run out and they could only manage six as the game was sensationally tied.