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Nikorima stars as Kiwis cane England

New Zealand have avoided a series whitewash in dominating fashion with a crushing 34-0 victory over England in the third and final Test at Elland Road in Leeds on Sunday (Monday morning AEDT).

Kodi Nikorima was everywhere for the Kiwis to help guide the side to an 18-0 lead at half-time and the one-way traffic continued into the second with the record-breaking crowd of 32,186 silenced for most of the contest.

Despite conceding the series in the second Test, the Kiwis' attitude was on song from the opening set on Remembrance Day and with England having three disallowed tries, New Zealand's lead never looked under threat.

The early onslaught started in the fourth minute with a late offload from Jared Waerea-Hargreaves putting pressure on England's defence for Ken Maumalo to step inside Jake Connor and Jonny Lomax to the line.

England were denied the chance to hit back through Golden Boot winner Tommy Makinson with John Bateman ruled to have obstructed Kevin Proctor in the lead-up.

New Zealand had a try of their own disallowed three minutes later with Jamayne Isaako getting a foot on the line in a try-scoring opportunity.

Match Highlights: England v Kiwis - Third Test

The Kiwis' dominance in the first half was sealed when Nikorima shrugged away from Chris Hill in the middle of the paddock to link with Shaun Johnson for an 18-point advantage at the break.

Any thoughts of a comeback were extinguished early by the Kiwis with Nikorima placing a cross-field kick for Maumalo to outleap Jermaine McGillvary for his second try of the afternoon.

Kiwis coach Michael Maguire said the side was building towards an all-round performance.

"I have felt that the players are capable of doing things like that," Maguire said.

"The way they've come together you could see that growing. It's a bit of a shame I guess, it's the first time I've been in this position where all of a sudden we're finished.

"You want to keep it going after we've built the momentum."

England lost Jake Connor to a head knock in the process to compound a disappointing end to the series despite retaining the Baskerville Shield.

New Zealand's ill-discipline has been a weakness this series and that continued despite the lop-sided result with Waerea-Hargreaves sin-binned in the second half for repeated offences.

DWZ: Our country deserved it

England were next to be reduced to 12 with McGillvary binned for a professional foul and the Kiwis pounced with a further two tries.

Jesse Bromwich capped a solid return to the international game with a try under the sticks, before Joseph Tapine crashed over the line in near identical fashion.

Kiwis debutant Isaiah Papali'i got on the field in the 68th minute for an afternoon to remember with the Warriors forward converting Tapine's try moments before the siren.

The crowd found their voices late in the game with the 2018 season coming to a close but the result ultimately put a halt to England's recent run of success against the Kiwis.

Nikorima wins man of the match

"I wasn't happy with the performance but accepted what happened out there and understand it better than most so can move on from there," England coach Wayne Bennett said post-game.

"You never see scorelines like that coming but it happens. We got to the try line on a couple of occasions and they weren't deemed to be tries so it just runs that way some days.

"We've got to keep in perspective we had two great games and played great football. That's why we won the series."

Both sides were a part of a spine-tingling Remembrance Day service in the pre-game ceremony and came together linked arm-in-arm during the ode and minute silence to cap off a series that produced everything for the international game.

Nikorima was named man of the match while Makinson added the George Smith Medal for player of the series to his Golden Boot triumph.

Makinson praises Bennett influence

Acknowledgement of Country

Wests Tigers respect and honour the Traditional Custodians of the land and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future. We acknowledge the stories, traditions and living cultures of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples on the lands we meet, gather and play on.