New Zealand now have 47.92% points, and can only move as high as 55.36% with wins from their remaining two fixtures in the series. England, who are already out of contention for a spot in the WTC final, are in sixth place with 42.50% points.
Both teams were found to have fallen three overs short of the target after time allowances were taken into consideration, with sides penalised one point for each over they were found to be short. On-field umpires Ahsan Raza and Rod Tucker, third umpire Adrian Holdstock and fourth official Kim Cotton levelled the charges, which Tom Latham and Ben Stokes, the two captains, accepted, and match referee David Boon imposed the sanctions.
The top-two positions in the WTC table are currently occupied by India and South Africa, respectively, with Australia at No. 3 and Sri Lanka at No. 4. With 15 Tests to go in the current WTC cycle, no team is assured of a place in the top two.
After winning the Test series 3-0 in India, New Zealand’s sloppy fielding in Christchurch, which resulted in an eight-wicket loss, ruined any realistic chance of them making their second WTC final.
Source: ESPN Crickinfo