Monday, June 23, 2025
17.9 C
London

England set for gripping run-chase in first Test against India

  • England will chase 371 on final day of the first Test against India at Headingley
  • Tons from Rishabh Pant and KL Rahul looked to have put the tourists in control
  • But Josh Tongue swept up the tail to give Ben Stokes’ side a chance of victory 

Headingley, you’re spoiling us. After a day high on skill and drama, plus a costly dropped catch and some slapstick farce, the equation going into the final morning is simple: England need 371 to pull off the kind of madcap victory on which Ben Stokes and his team pride themselves.

The record books suggest it ought to be beyond them. Only once before, against India at Edgbaston in 2022, have they successfully chased more in the fourth innings. But England believe record books exist to be ripped up, and only today’s iffy forecast will slow their headlong attempt to go one up in this five-match series.

By stumps, Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett had knocked 21 off the target, and repelled the first three-over burst of Jasprit Bumrah — in itself, a minor victory.

That they have even a glimmer of a chance was thanks to India’s second collapse of the game, after chalk-and-cheese centuries from the studious KL Rahul and the outrageous Rishabh Pant appeared to have shut the door on English hopes.

And for the second time it was Josh Tongue who feasted on the Indian tail, producing a triple-wicket maiden as the last six fell for 31. On Saturday, it had been seven for 41, with Tongue hoovering up four in 17 balls. If India lose after being 430 for three in their first innings and 333 for four in their second, the inquest will last all the way to next week’s second Test at Edgbaston.

In England’s favour is the trueness of a Headingley surface that has offered occasional bounce and turn, but nothing to suggest it will morph into a minefield. In the last decade, no venue in the world boasts a higher fourth-innings batting average than its 43.79. Stokes’s decision to insert India on the first morning was made with precisely this sort of number in mind.

Josh Tongue took three wickets in an over to keep England in the hunt for a remarkable win

Rishabh Pant again thrilled the Headingley crowd as he scored his second century of the Test

Ben Stokes's decision to bowl will be vindicated if England can chase down 371 on Tuesday

On the other side of the balance sheet lies Bumrah, the freakish genius who has operated on a different plane from any bowler on either side. If there is any devil in the pitch, he will find it; even if there isn’t, England will be wary.

The fourth-day exchanges in a game that has staggered this way and that like a group of fancy-dress nuns on the Western Terrace centred on some wonderful batting from Rahul and Pant, who had in common the object they were holding, but little else.

Rahul is a right-handed technician with a respect for defence and a penchant for the cover-drive. Pant is a left-handed maverick, with no obvious respect for anything other than his right to entertain.

He charged at his second ball, scything Chris Woakes over the slips, and soon top-edged a slog-sweep off Brydon Carse for a one-bounce four. When he fell over trying to repeat the stroke moments later, England reviewed for lbw, only for replays to show a thick inside edge. It was cricket, all right, though not as most of us know it.

Brought together by the early dismissal of Shubman Gill, who played on to Carse for eight, India’s fourth-wicket pair somehow survived England’s best bowling session of the match. Had Harry Brook not put down a sharp but catchable chance above his head in the gully when Rahul had 59, the game might have taken a different path. But the Indians rode their luck and trusted their judgment, with Rahul cementing his reputation as a compiler of tough runs.

In Indian cricket, they talk of the SENA countries – South Africa, England, New Zealand and Australia, who together embody the conditions that have so often flummoxed their batsmen. Yet Rahul has saved some of his best innings for the SENA quartet, including a pair of hundreds at Centurion, a century at Sydney and now three in England. It is why, despite a modest overall record, he is so central to this team.

Pant defies categorisation, taking his tally of sixes in this game to eight, and becoming only the second wicketkeeper in Test history – after the former England coach Andy Flower for Zimbabwe against South Africa at Harare in 2001 – to score two hundreds in a game. No Indian had previously achieved the feat against England.

As the partnership grew towards its eventual 195, Stokes looked uncharacteristically passive. Under normal circumstances, trying to defend might have made sense. But Pant is not normal circumstances, and twice after lunch he edged Tongue through a strangely empty slip cordon.

Much will depend on England's ability to keep out the great Jasprit Bumrah on the final day

KL Rahul raises his bat after a knock of 137 which should have put the game beyond England

Harry Brook performs a handstand to prove he can match Pant for acrobatic skills after India's wicket-keeper batter had marked his century with a somersault earlier in the Test match

This game has reminded England that, in Bumrah and Pant, they must contend not with mere cricketers but with forces of nature. Bumrah makes the ball sing, Pant makes bowlers weep; neither cares for the textbook. And while fans of Adam Gilchrist may disagree, there is even a case for including both in an all-time World XI.

Even when Pant finally fell for 118, heaving Shoaib Bashir to Crawley at deep midwicket, India led by 293. And when Rahul and Karun Nair took the total into the 330s, it seemed only a question of when they might declare.

Instead, Carse – who had bowled beautifully before lunch with next to no luck – induced a drag on from Rahul, who walked off to a standing ovation after making 138, and India’s gossamer-thin lower order folded again.

Woakes held a sharp return catch to send back Nair for 20 and take his first wicket of a below-par game, before Tongue struck three times in four balls: Shardul Thakur edging to slip, Mohammed Shami bounced out, Bumrah comprehensively bowled. And when last man Prasidh Krishna swung Bashir to deep midwicket, it was Tongue who held on.

England refuse to lie down. And it has given them a crack at an all-time heist.

India CricketEngland Cricket

Hot this week

Xbox One to launch in China this month after all

Happy Sunday from Software Expand! In this week's edition...

Gadget Ogling: Amazon on Fire, Virtual Reality, True Nature and Energy Relief

Happy Sunday from Software Expand! In this week's edition...

Gabby Logan reveals major bedroom move forward has been the secret to her 23-year marriage to husband Kenny after he shared the effect his...

Gabby Logan recently revealed her secrets to a happy marriage after her husband Kenny Logan opened up...

George Baldock funeral: Dele Alli bows his head for his ‘brother’ as aged team-mates pay tribute to tragic footballer in Sheffield after he was...

The ex-Sheffield United star - who was born in England but played internationally for Greece - was...

Marriott Plays With Sensory-Rich Virtual Reality Getaways

Happy Sunday from Software Expand! In this week's edition...

Paul Pogba was left ‘shocked’ by ‘unkind’ Juventus after doping ban

Paul Pogba believes Juventus did not support him during his doping ban. He was handed a four-year suspension after returning an adverse drugs test, which was later slashed to 18 months.

Doha-bound flight from the UK makes U-turn after Iran fires missiles

Flight QTR36R had reached the western Turkish coastline when it made a dramatic U-turn back to Manchester.

Church shooter named after plowing into congregation armed with AR-15

Brian Browning, 31, was shot dead by security guards after he opened fire on CrossPointe Church in Wayne, Michigan, on Sunday morning.

Girl, 8, is orphaned after her parents and brother are killed in crash

Andy Moore, 46, his partner Swala Harling, 47, and their son Sebastian Moore, 14, died when their BMW came off the M5 near Gloucester on May 30.

Trump breaks silence on Iran’s ‘weak’ missile strike in taunting post

LIVE UPDATES: President Trump taunted Iran for its 'very weak response' to his strikes on its nuclear facilities after Iran fired a barrage of missiles at a US military base Qatar on Monday.

‘No charges laid’ after Brit, 23, shot dead at her father’s US home

A manslaughter investigation was launched in February after Lucy Harrison, 23, from Warrington, Cheshire, was killed at the house in Prosper, Texas , on January 10.

Liam Delap opens up on Chelsea’s No 9 curse and ‘old school’ battles

KIERAN GILL IN PHILADELPHIA: It says something that in our 25 minutes with Liam Delap on the 60th floor of Chelsea's team hotel, not once do we bring up his old man, Rory.

Dawson’s Creek favorites have a mini reunion on the red carpet in LA

There was a mini Dawson's Creek reunion in Los Angeles on Sunday when two of the show's favorites turned up on the red carpet at a charity event in Los Angeles.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img