logo
Jamie Smith has ‘long England career ahead of him'

Jamie Smith has ‘long England career ahead of him'

The pair moved mountains together as they attempted to drag their side back into contention on day three of the second Rothesay Test, coming together at 84 for five and conjuring a spectacular fightback.
Brook made 158 as he brought up the ninth century of his Test career, with Smith smiting a sensational 184 not out.
Stumps on Day 3.
An incredible partnership between Harry Brook and Jamie Smith lit up the day, but India have extended their lead to 2️⃣4️⃣4️⃣ runs. pic.twitter.com/rn8w0nU2LK
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 4, 2025
That was the highest ever score by an England number seven and an England wicketkeeper, pinching the latter record from his Surrey mentor Alec Stewart.
Remarkably their efforts were not enough to keep the hosts on an even keel, India ending the day with a lead of 244 and nine wickets in hand. England's card contained six ducks and Joe Root's 22 was the next best score in their 407 all out.
Another bout of fourth-innings heroics will surely be needed to stop the tourists squaring the series 1-1 over the next two days, but Brook was buoyed by Smith's eye-catching contribution.
'It was good fun being out there with Smudge. He's a phenomenal player and it felt good to be out there, putting on 300 with him,' he said.
'The way that he came out of the blocks and put the pressure back on their bowlers was awesome. He tried to change the momentum back in our favour and it worked for a long period of time. It's one he should be proud of.
'It was so good to watch from the other end, I felt like he could hit four or six every ball and I was just trying to get him on strike. He just leans on it and it goes to the boundary. He has a long England career ahead of him.'
To no great surprise, there is no suggestion whatsoever from the England camp that a draw, and preserving their series lead, would be an acceptable outcome with the odds stacked against them.
For a side who chased 378 on the same ground against the same opponents three years ago, as well as 371 in the first Test at Headingley, that can hardly go down as a surprise.
'I think everybody in the world knows that we're going to try and chase whatever they set us,' said a defiant Brook.
'We've obviously got a big task at hand but we'll try and get a couple of wickets early on and try and put them under pressure. You never know how this game can go.'
Brook may have taken second billing to his partner on the day but he batted with a tangible sense of purpose after being dismissed for 99 in the series opener.
'I was definitely hungry to get 100 today. I'd never been out in the 90s before in my life, so it was disappointing,' he said.
Should India finish the job and leave Birmingham with a win, they will have much to thank Mohammed Siraj for. He took six for 70, including Root and Ben Stokes off consecutive balls at the start of the day and three tailenders in quick succession at the end.
With Jasprit Bumrah rested this week, he took the chance to fill the void left by the star seamer.
'I have been bowling well but not getting wickets, so getting six here is very special,' he said.
'When you are asked to lead the attack I love responsibility, I love the challenge.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

England to face world record chase as India lead grows to 484 at Edgbaston
England to face world record chase as India lead grows to 484 at Edgbaston

South Wales Guardian

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Guardian

England to face world record chase as India lead grows to 484 at Edgbaston

Ben Stokes' side have pledged to go after whatever target they are set rather than fight for a draw but will need to beat the biggest fourth-innings pursuit ever seen after India continued racking up the runs in Birmingham. They moved to 304 for four at tea, Shubman Gill continuing his remarkable form in his first series as captain with his third century in four knocks this summer. India skipper Shubman Gill follows up his double hundred with another 💯 at Edgbaston 👏#WTC27 #ENGvIND 📝: — ICC (@ICC) July 5, 2025 In following his first-innings 269 with an even 100 not out, Gill also became the highest-scoring Indian batter in a single Test. Traditional cricketing logic would suggest India already have more than enough in the bank to push for the 10 wickets they need to level the series at 1-1, but their refusal to entertain a declaration and push towards 500 suggests England's reputation as fearless chasers has spooked them. They hunted down 378 for the loss of just three wickets at this ground in 2022 and finished five down pursuing 371 at Headingley last week. With four full sessions to go, India appear unsure just how far they need to go to be safe. The tourists held all the cards as play began, already 244 in front with nine wickets in hand. Brydon Carse did his best to undercut their position with a challenging initial spell, eventually getting a deserved scalp when Karun Nair's booming drive clipped the edge and carried through to wicketkeeper Jamie Smith. KL Rahul was a thorn in England's side, making 55 before Josh Tongue speared one through his defences and sent middle stump tumbling. By then the lead had already ticked past 300 and there was more to come as Rishabh Pant began a chaotic cameo. Rishabh Pant's bat has gone flying again 🙈 But this time the ball goes straight down the throat of Ben Duckett at deep mid-off. — England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 5, 2025 He blasted 65 off 58 balls, with three sixes and eight fours, swinging with so much gusto he twice lost his grip and sent the bat flying into the outfield. He got away with the first one, scurrying to collect his blade from square-leg, but was caught by Ben Duckett at deep mid-off when he let lost control a second time. Zak Crawley missed an easy chance to cut his explosive stay on just 10, shelling a simple mid-off catch off Stokes' bowling to cap and increasingly weary performance. England had spent 151 overs in the field in the first innings and had racked up another 67 by tea, the miles bearing heavy in their legs. India added 127 runs in the afternoon session, grinding England down rather than going for all-out aggression. Gill was in complete control, breezing to three figures in 127 balls, while Ravindra Jadeja was unexpectedly pedestrian in reaching 25no from 68.

‘You don't just have to win or lose': Trescothick admits draw in England's thoughts for final day
‘You don't just have to win or lose': Trescothick admits draw in England's thoughts for final day

The Guardian

time6 hours ago

  • The Guardian

‘You don't just have to win or lose': Trescothick admits draw in England's thoughts for final day

Finally, the D word has entered England's vocabulary. While Marcus Trescothick, the assistant coach, said the team 'are always trying to be as positive as we can', in the face of needing 536 runs with seven wickets standing to beat India on the final day, he acknowledged: 'You don't have to just win or lose.' A dressing room that is normally fixated on winning is finally coming to terms with a different result – not defeat, but a draw. As the final day at Edgbaston dawns on Sunday, the prospect of victory will be laughably remote, with India's seamers in form and still fresh and England pursuing a target fully 190 higher than anything that has been successfully chased in the entire history of Test cricket. The Old Trafford washout during the 2023 Ashes remains the only stalemate in 35 matches played under Ben Stokes's captaincy. 'I have got no interest in playing for draws, the dressing room's got no interest in playing for draws and we always try and look at the positive option,' Stokes famously said in 2022. But after India completely dominated the fourth day, Trescothick admitted that the time might have come to become interested. 'That has been built up away from what the changing-room messages are,' Trescothick said. 'We obviously understand a bit better what we're trying to do. We're trying to give the players the best opportunity to win games every time we go out to play. And if we can't do that, then we try and adapt accordingly. 'We're always trying to be as positive as we can. I think we all appreciate it's a hell of a lot of runs to try to score. It's nearly 550 tomorrow, and I don't think we've seen scoring rates quite that quick in a day. We're not stupid enough [not] to understand that you don't have to just win or lose. There are three results possible in every game that you play.' There was a point as England started their long-distance chase on Saturday evening when the residents of the Hollies Stand struck up a chant of 'stand up if you still believe'. 'We were all stood up in the changing room,' Trescothick said. 'It'll be a challenging day, no doubt, but we've had various Test matches over the period of time that Brendon [McCulllum] and Ben have been in charge and [changed] the way we've gone about things. We've done some things in our time that are different to what has been done before.' During England's first innings all 10 wickets fell when the ball in play was less than 22 overs old, and if there is a straw for them to clutch it is that they are only six away from reaching that point. 'In our first innings we were three down overnight,' Trescothick said. 'We came out the next day, obviously we lost a couple of early wickets, but then we had a monster partnership that really got us back into the game. So it's definitely possible. Once the ball goes softer it definitely gets a little bit easier, and it hasn't seamed as much as when it's new. So if we can potentially bat a bit better, and maybe not lose two wickets like we did on the morning of day three, then who knows?' Morne Morkel, India's bowling coach, certainly did not think the result is a foregone conclusion: 'Tomorrow morning that first hour is going to be crucial,' he said. India's decision to delay their declaration until deep into the final session, by which time their lead had been stretched to a massive 607, suggested that even after extending their opponent's task to historic proportions – and with memories fresh of them easily chasing 371 at Headingley a fortnight ago – they feared England might actually make it. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion 'England have been successful playing this way, chasing totals,' Morkel said. 'I know a lot of teams would prefer to bat out three or four sessions and shake hands and take the draw, but that's their thing. If teams set them a total of 400 they're happy to take it on. That's great for the game, but I think teams will start to be slightly more street smart, learn from their mistakes and plan a little bit better.'

England face challenge of bravado as India take total control of second Test
England face challenge of bravado as India take total control of second Test

South Wales Guardian

time7 hours ago

  • South Wales Guardian

England face challenge of bravado as India take total control of second Test

In the three years since Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum took the reins of the Test side it has become a guiding principle that their team do not do draws – a rain-ruined Ashes clash at Old Trafford the only one in 37 matches of the 'Bazball' era. Now they may be forced to accept that avoiding defeat is the only route out of Birmingham that keeps their series lead in tact. Stumps on Day 4. 🏏 Ollie Pope (24*)🏏 Harry Brook (15*) 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 7️⃣2️⃣-3️⃣ — England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 5, 2025 Chasing a colossal 608, almost 200 more than the world record, they found themselves 72 for three at the end of day four. With an inconceivable 536 to win in 90 overs, a challenge of their bravado awaits. India, riding on the coat-tails of yet another century from their insatiable captain Shubman Gill, raised eyebrows by delaying their declaration well beyond expectation and they must now hope the weather does not leave them short of time. By the time Gill finally pulled the plug at 427 for six, a packed crowd had stopped singing Oasis songs and started chanting 'boring, boring India'. England's fearless approach to fourth-innings batting had clearly spooked the tourists, who saw them easily chase down 378 on this ground in 2022 and 371 at Headingley last week, but their ultra-cautious approach slipped down the agenda as they wreaked havoc with the new ball. Zak Crawley flashed Mohammed Siraj to backward point to bag England's seventh duck of the match and Ben Duckett followed for a rapid 25. Five boundaries in 15 balls from the left-hander had the boisterous Hollies Stand taking to their feet as they hollered 'stand up if you still believe', but they were back in their seats when Akash Deep smashed his stumps with a beauty. Deep was at it again when he added the coveted scalp of Joe Root for six, blasting out his off stump with speed, seam and skill. If India do take the remaining seven wickets they require, it will be a crowning achievement for Gill, who followed his first-innings 269 with a flawless 161. That took his match total to 430, the second highest aggregate in Test history, and his series output to a staggering 585 in four visits. After stepping in to the number four spot previously occupied by national icons Sachin Tendulkar and Virat Kohli, Gill already looks at home. Another record-breaking knock from Shubman Gill at Edgbaston 🔥#WTC27 #ENGvIND 📝: — ICC (@ICC) July 5, 2025 India held all the cards at the start of play, already 244 in front with nine wickets in hand. By lunch England had taken two more, Karun Nair caught behind to cap a vibrant opening burst from Brydon Carse and KL Rahul seeing his middle stump uprooted by a ripper from Josh Tongue. But by the interval Gill's latest bout of gorging had begun and India were in front by 357. A chaotic cameo of 65 from Rishabh Pant ensued, with eight fours, three sixes and two missed catches. On two separate occasions he swung so hard he hurled the bat high into the air, including the shot that eventually saw him caught by Duckett. Crawley had earlier dropped an easy chance with Pant on 10, caping an increasingly weary performance from the hosts. Gill breezed to his hundred in 127 balls and cut loose after tea, blazing five sixes and four fours. By now England had become passengers, a disorientated Ollie Pope running past a catch in the deep as he lost sight of the ball, and the crowd were baying for the innings to end. At one stage they thought the declaration had come and cheered loudly in response, only to jeer when play resumed. Shoaib Bashir eventually dismissed Gill with a caught and bowled, but figures of two for 119 were scant cause for celebration. When Gill finally called his side in there were just 16 overs possible, but that was enough to plunge England into deep strife. Crawley did not trouble the scorers before an over-ambitious slash outside off gave Siraj the breakthrough and Duckett's brief charge was ended when Deep bowled him from round the wicket. Where India had batted with impunity, every ball appeared to carry danger for England and Deep hit the jackpot when he skewered Root with a rocket that nipped away crashed into off stump. Harry Brook and Pope are first to the crease on Sunday and must decide overnight whether they can stomach fighting for a stalemate.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store