From Attritional Contest to Absolute Snorter

A look back at a test match that was always a tense, attritional contest and over the final two days became an absolute snorter of a match, plus not one but two photo galleries.

Just under three-quarters of an hour ago the third test match of the series between the England and India men’s teams came to an end. I covered the early exchanges in a previous post, and this one picks up more or less where that one left off.

As lunch on the third day approached India were 248-3, with Rahul approaching a century and Pant also going well. Then Rahul, not eager to take lunch with his score still in the 90s went for a run to get the strike back, Pant was hesitant and Stokes’ direct hit throw ran the Indian wicket keeper out. Shortly after the interval Rahul did complete his century, but the landmark disrupted his previously unshakeable concentration, and he was out for exactly 100, caught by Brook off Bashir. The spinner was to suffer a finger injury that severely limited his participation. Ravindra Jadeja now batted well, with support from first Reddy and then Sundar. At 376-6 it looked like the only question would be the size of India’s lead, but then Jadeja was out, edging Woakes through to Smith. The tail then folded and India were all out for 387, exact parity on first innings.

England’s openers Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett got through to the close without loss, helped by getting away with some serious time wasting which ensured that there was time for only one over before the 6:30PM cut off.

The following day it soon became clear the batting conditions were much tougher than they had been early in the match. Bumrah bowled superbly, but it was Siraj who got the first breakthrough, having Duckett caught by his new ball bowling partner for 12 to make it 22-1. With scores level on first innings it did not require a wrangler to calculate the lead. Siraj behaved rather badly in the aftermath of the Duckett dismissal, to the extent that he lost some of his match fee. The second wicket was also Siraj’s, Pope LBW for just 5. Then Crawley, who had already enjoyed several slices of luck gave Jaiswal an easy catch off Reddy for 22 to make it 50-3. Root and Brook batted well for a period, but then Brook in a rather bizarre shot choice essayed a sweep at pace bowler Akash Deep, missed it and was bowled. That was 87-4. Remarkably every subsequent wicket in the England innings would also be out bowled. At 154-4 it was looking as though Root and Stokes had stabilized things for England, and speculation was on as to just how big a lead they could carve out. Then Sundar bowled Root for 40. With the most technically accomplished batter in the side gone and the pitch definitely getting tricky England fell away badly. Sundar added Stokes, Smith and Bashir to his scalp bag, Bumrah, never to be denied, dealt with Woakes and Carse. England had mustered 192 in their second innings and would need to bowl very well to defend such a total.

Archer struck in the second over of the innings, removing Jaiswal for a duck. KL Rahul and Karun Nair scored slowly but looked reasonably comfortable, and at 41-1 it looked like England’s chances of giving India a troubled night’s sleep were fading. Then Carse pinned Nair LBW for 14, a dismissal that may have ended Nair’s return to the side as well. A few moments later Carse added the prize scalp of skipper Shubman Gill, also LBW, for just 6. With the third to last scheduled ball of the day Stokes bowled night watcher Akash Deep all ends up and India overnighted on 58-4, still needing 135 more to win.

I have opted to split today’s gallery into two, due its size and also because this is a fairly substantial post…

I have never been the hugest fan of the traditional night watcher, whereby a tail ender is sacrificed to prevent a proper batter from having to walk in that evening. When Gill was out I was thinking (and posted on mastodon to that effect) in terms of Sundar, who might had he seen it through then gone on to play a proper innings, rather than one of the genuine tail enders if India opted to protect Pant, and I regard the splattering of Deep’s stumps to end day four as a compelling exhibit against sacrificing tail enders in this fashion.

England started the final day splendidly. Stokes, who put in an epic shift with the ball, and Archer were the early stars. Pant had reached 9 when Archer bowled him to make it 71-5. Ten runs later KL Rahul was hit on the pads by Stokes, it was initially not given, but Stokes, who is pretty good at judging when to use DRS sent it upstairs, and the replay made it clear that it was indeed out. Rahul had scored 39, and his dismissal heaped pressure on Jadeja. Archer then held a return catch and Sundar was on his way without scoring. India were 82-7. Reddy gave Jadeja solid support for a while, lasting 53 balls for his 13 before edging Woakes to Smith. By now the ball was getting soft, and from 112-8 the Indian tail showed a resolve that until that point had been conspicuously absent from its batting. The game at this point was following a pretty much set pattern – four balls of each over at Jadeja with the field set back off the fourth of which he took a single and the last two attacking the tail ender. The scoring was painfully slow, but as the runs gradually ticked up the Indian fans in the crowd made their presence felt. After 22 overs of resistance, which had yielded 35 runs, reducing the ask to 46, Bumrah made his one and only mistake, hitting a ball from Stokes into the hands of sub fielder Sam Cook to make 147-9. Bumrah had only scored 5, but he had resisted for 54 balls. Siraj showed similar levels of determination. Bashir, with two of his fingers bound together due to one being injured, finally got a turn at the bowling crease, and he did not bowl badly. With a target of only 193 the new ball had not looked even a possibility at the start of the innings, but it was now only a few overs away. However, just a few minutes before 5PM on the final day of a contest that always been a tense, attritional affair and had over the last five and a bit sessions become a bona fide humdinger, the injured Bashir induced Siraj to play a ball into his stumps, and India were all out for 170, beaten by 22 runs, putting England 2-1 up in the series. Three results going into this final day were possible, a win for England, a win for India and a tie. The last named had it happened would have been a first in first class cricket – a completely unsplittable tie, with each side having identical first innings (387 plays 387) and second innings (192 plays 192) scores. Stokes, who had had a fine all round game, and had on the final day taken responsibility for bowling England to victory on his own shoulders and put in a truly massive effort was named Player of the Match. A full scorecard of this truly extraordinary test match can be viewed here.

My usual sign off…

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Author: Thomas

I am a founder member and currently secretary of the West Norfolk Autism Group and am autistic myself. I am a very keen photographer and almost every blog post I produce will feature some of my own photographs. I am an avidly keen cricket fan and often post about that sport.

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