Noeline Taurua used all 12 squad members and handed test debuts to defender Erena Mikaere, who replaced Jane Watson in the third quarter, and 21-year-old midcourter Kimiora Poi, injected just before half time.
But having set a target of two wins from three in this series, which comes six months out from the Netball World Cup at this same venue, much work remains for Taurua over the next six days before facing Australia in London.
As it happened: Silver Ferns v England
That is now a must win scenario to suggest genuine progress is being made.
As it stands, this result equalled New Zealand's worst defeat to England - Taurua's first match at the helm in Auckland last September.
One win from the last six tests is poor by anyone's standards.
But, like anything, context is important.
England have now won the four straight matches against the Ferns – six of the past nine. They are also, of course, Commonwealth Games champions, having stunning Australia on the Gold Coast last year.
And in front of a boisterous home crowd, they started with intent to prove that result was no fluke.
The Ferns, by comparison began poorly, conceding the first three goals.
The experienced Serena Guthrie owned the midcourt, giving Sam Sinclair, starting at centre, a difficult time.
The Ferns regrouped to establish attacking fluidity but England did enough to hold a 13-12 first quarter advantage.
Casey Kopua's return, the former skipper playing her first international since 2015 after coming out of retirement, brought rewards in combination with Watson.
England's reunited shooting duo, Helen Housby and Jo Harten, are one of the best in the world yet the Ferns pair forced England back; applied pressure and extracted several errors.
With Laura Langman driving through court from wing defence, Ameliaranne Ekenasio punching out of the circle and Whitney Souness looping around, the Ferns attack showed patience but frustrating, erratic moments and indecision were still too evident.
Too often Sinclair proved the weak link. Thus she was pulled just before half time, with Poi taking her place.
At half time, England maintained their one goal lead.
There after it seemed every time the Ferns threatened individual errors or missed connections prevailed. The final quarter but one example; defender Karin Burger binned for aggressive contact.
The third quarter also proved costly as the Ferns slipped 10 goals behind.
The shooting end, Maria Folau (32/29) and Ekenasio (12/13), produced high percentages but did not receive enough quality ball.
Plenty, then, for Taurua to ponder.
In the other of this double header, meanwhile, Australia got off to a shaky start with their final 62-45 win over South Africa proving flattering.
Australian coach Lisa Alexander's initial experimental line up was exposed early as Norma Plummer's South Africa applied early pressure and shot out to a surprise five goal lead at the first quarter mark.
That forced Alexander to inject her more experienced figures, allowing Australia to gradually pull away.
South Africa will take heart, though; this performance a vast improvement on the 24 goal defeat the last time these teams met.
For Australia, defending world champions, Bassett's absence was clear and South Africa shooter Lenize Potgieter had ample room to move for much of the match.