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Williamson steers Kiwis ship

London - Kane Williamson's century and a typically dashing innings from skipper Brendon McCullum helped give New Zealand a first-innings lead on the third day of the first Test against England at Lord's on Saturday.

New Zealand were 407 for four when rain led to an early lunch minutes before the scheduled interval, a lead of 18 runs after England made 389 in their first innings.

Williamson was 112 not out, having shared stands of 189 with Ross Taylor (62) and 66 with McCullum (42).

New Zealand resumed on 303 for two, with Williamson 92 not out and Taylor unbeaten on 47.

England with the new ball available to them just three overs after the start of Saturday's play, opened proceedings with Moeen Ali.

Williamson helped himself to five runs off the spinner before a three down to third man off James Anderson saw the New Zealand number three -- unlike England's Joe Root and Ben Stokes who'd both fallen in the 90s earlier in this match -- to a hundred.

Batting with impressive serenity for a 24-year-old, Williamson's century came in just over three hours off 148 balls including 12 fours.

It was the talented Williamson's 10th hundred in 40 Tests - an impressive strike-rate - and the 14th by a New Zealand batsman in a Test at Lord's.

But batting in overcast conditions became significantly more challenging once England took the new ball with New Zealand 315 for two off 80 overs.

The extra bounce on offer proved Taylor's undoing when he fended at a rising ball from Stuart Broad and was brilliantly caught, one-handed down the legside at full stretch, by diving wicket-keeper Jos Buttler.

McCullum, however, struck his first ball, from Broad, through cover-point for four.

But that life was as tough for batsmen as at any point in the match came when Williamson, on 106, edged Anderson just short of England captain Alastair Cook at first slip.

Meanwhile the umpires ordered the floodlights to be switched on in a bid to ensure play wasn't halted for bad light.

McCullum, much praised for his dynamism during New Zealand's run to the World Cup final, ignored the conditions to pull Stokes for six into the Grandstand after going down the pitch to the seamer.

However, he was out when he became Mark Wood's first Test wicket after an outside-edge off an attempted pull flew to Root at third man.

McCullum's quickfire innings saw him face just 38 balls, including six fours and a six.

Next ball Williamson, on 112, needed an 'umpire's call' review verdict to survive Wood's lbw appeal.

England's cause was not helped by a surfeit of extras, with a wasteful 58 conceded in the innings come lunch.

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