In 32 first-class matches, the New Zealand tourists won 13 times and lost only once, when they were caught on a drying pitch at Oxford without Cowie, their player best able to exploit such conditions. The team's success was built on the weight of runs that its batsmen provided, and the bowling figures, Burtt apart, were modest. After a draw against
Yorkshire in which both Wallace and Len Hutton scored centuries, New Zealand reeled off victories against
Worcestershire and
Surrey, and Wallace made it four centuries in five matches in the drawn match with
Leicestershire and the victory over
Cambridge University. The
MCC match, one of the set-pieces of the cricket calendar, saw a slow draw with New Zealand rescued by a seventh wicket partnership of 176 by Mooney and Rabone. Then came the defeat by
Oxford University in a low-scoring match, but the threat of a repeat in the following fixture, against
Sussex, when New Zealand trailed by 116 on the first innings, disappeared through good bowling by Cowie and good batting by Reid, Sutcliffe and Donnelly in a successful run-chase. Drawn matches with
Somerset and
Glamorgan led up to the first Test. Weakness in bowling showed in the two first-class matches between the first two Tests. In the first game,
Hampshire were dismissed for 129 and then centuries for Scott and Donnelly gave the New Zealanders a first innings lead of 301 before a declaration with only five wickets down. But Hampshire recovered to set the tourists 109 to win in just 35 minutes, a target that was achieved with five minutes to spare. Against Surrey, a New Zealand first innings of 465, of which Sutcliffe made 187, the county replied with 645 for nine declared, and
Jack Parker scored 255. The second Test was followed by an easy victory over the Combined Services, and then came 11 wickets for Burtt in the victory over
Gloucestershire, a match in which the county's spin bowling pair of
Tom Goddard and
Sam Cook bowled unchanged through the 90 overs of the New Zealand first innings.
Lancashire made the touring team follow on for the first time in the season, but New Zealand salvaged a draw, and then the match with
Derbyshire followed the Hampshire pattern, with a big first-innings lead whittled down by a second-innings recovery for the county, leaving the tourists with a successful run-chase to win.
Northamptonshire eked a draw out of a high-scoring match, but New Zealand dominated the game in Glasgow against
Scotland and Cowie's six second-innings wickets were clean bowled. After the third Test, the return match with Yorkshire was very tight, with the county left to score 169 in 100 minutes and hanging on 61 short with the last available batsmen together when time ran out. The second match with Glamorgan was badly affected by rain with the New Zealanders in a commanding position, thanks to a big century by Wallace and six wickets for Cresswell. Games with
Warwickshire,
Nottinghamshire and
Essex all ended in batsman-dominated draws. In the Essex game, Sutcliffe scored 243 in the first innings and an unbeaten 100 in the second innings, the first time a New Zealander had scored two hundreds in a match outside New Zealand. The final Test was followed by a two-day match with Durham, and then the New Zealanders won the return match with Lancashire by scoring 153 to win in 75 minutes.
Kent scraped a draw after Hadlee did not enforce the follow-on, and joint
county champions Middlesex batted very unevenly, and lost by nine wickets as Sutcliffe scored 110 out of 157 in 95 minutes. The end-of-season festival matches saw a South of England side beaten by an innings and at
Scarborough a H. D. G. Leveson Gower's XI side composed entirely of Test players lost by six wickets, though the New Zealanders were helped by generous declarations. ==Leading players==