
ENG vs IND: 378 repeat on cards? England back themselves to hunt down 371 vs India at Headingley as Tongue denies any draw chance
After four days of fighting cricket in the first England vs India Anderson-Tendulkar Test at Headingley in Leeds, the match is perfectly set up for a thrilling end while heading into the final day on Tuesday. With 21 for no loss, England are 350 behind and looking at their style of play, the Ben Stokes side is expected to go for India's 371-run target and not play for a draw.
England's pacer Josh Tongue reiterated this thought process after the close of day's play on Monday, which saw India getting bundled out for 364 after being 333 for four at one stage.
Asked if there was any scenario where a draw would become a good result, Tongue said: 'No. Just go for the win. That's the clear message in the changing room. We'll try and be as positive as we can in that first session, then see where we are at lunch – then we'll take things from there.'
Tongue picked three wickets — Shardul Thakur, Mohammed Siraj and Jasprit Bumrah — in a single over to run through India's tailenders and give England a realistic chance in this Test.
In their last 36 Tests under Stokes, England have managed just one draw, that too in the rain-affected Manchester Test in the 2023 Ashes. While the weather in Leeds on Sunday may once again play a role, Tongue feels England can replicate what they did in Edgbaston in 2022.
'With our batting line-up I feel we can chase down anything. Their bowlers are going to bowl well in periods, but it's about soaking up that pressure and putting it back on the bowlers. I don't see why we can't chase it. Obviously we're really confident. If you look at our batting line-up it's very strong. We play a positive brand of cricket,' said Tongue.
England chased down 378 against India in the fifth and last (rescheduled Test due to the pandemic) in Birmingham for their highest chase in Tests.
Indian opener KL Rahul also second Tongue's opinion when the same question. He said, 'I agree with Josh Tongue. There's definitely going to be a result. That's what England have said very openly and their style of cricket suggests that as well. It gives us a good opportunity to pick up 10 wickets.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


India Gazette
12 minutes ago
- India Gazette
Nathan Lyon expects another World Test Championship Final
Saint George's [Grenada], July 1 (ANI): Veteran Australian spinner Nathan Lyon has expressed his desire to continue playing Test cricket, with a strong focus on helping his team secure a second ICC World Test Championship crown, as per the official website of the ICC. Lyon played a major role in Australia's first victory in the World Test Championship Final against India in 2023 and was part of the side that fell to South Africa in the decider at Lord's last month. While the final of the next edition of the World Test Championship is still two years away, Lyon has no thoughts of retiring just yet, despite the fact, he recently handed over the task of leading Australia's victory song to keeper Alex Carey. The 37-year-old still has plenty he wants to achieve, with away series victories in India and England and another World Test Championship title right at the top of his list. 'I've always said I want to win away in India. I want to win away in England,' Lyon said, as quoted from the official website of the ICC. 'We've got that opportunity in a couple of years, but we've also got to take it Test by Test and make sure that we're doing everything here in the West Indies right,' he added. 'Then we've got a massive summer at home with the Ashes,' he noted. 'But another World Test Championship Final would be on my cards for sure,' the veteran spinner said. Lyon currently has a total of 556 Test wickets to his name, which is third on the list for Australian bowlers behind fellow spinner Shane Warne (708) and former quick Glenn McGrath (563). With two Tests remaining in the West Indies this month and the visit from England later this year still to come for the Aussies in 2025, there's every chance Lyon overtakes McGrath quickly and closes in on Warne's magical mark in the coming months. Lyon is not focused on potentially becoming Australia's greatest wicket-taker and wants to focus on winning games of Test cricket for his side. 'Warney's (Shane Warne) a long way away,' Lyon said. 'And in my eyes, he's the greatest to ever play the game. I'm just lucky to be part of a pretty special cricket team at the moment. We're on our way to becoming a great cricket team, we are not there (yet), as I always say. But to be part of this bowling attack and play my role is special. That's the reason why I keep playing,' he added. (ANI)


India Gazette
16 minutes ago
- India Gazette
"Need lot of character to bounce back in series": Ravi Shastri ahead of Birmingham Test
Birmingham [UK], July 1 (ANI): Former India coach Ravi Shastri has urged Team India to stay positive as they look to level the five-match Test series against England in Birmingham, as per the official website of the ICC. India fell to a five-wicket loss to England in the ICC World Test Championship series opener at Headingley despite dominating much of the contest and now need to regroup quickly ahead of the must-win encounter at Edgbaston that could well determine who claims the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy. Questions still remain whether pace spearhead Jasprit Bumrah will be risked by India for the second Test as his workload continues to be managed, while the team are also tossing up whether to include a second spinner in their line-up to help first-choice tweaker Ravindra Jadeja. Shastri is not too concerned by team selection and instead wants his former side to concentrate on playing positive cricket with good intent during the crucial Edgbaston contest. 'The most important thing for India is to throw the counter punch almost immediately,' Shastri told The ICC Review. 'When you lose a Test match like this where you have dominated most of it and then you lose it on the last day with a big chase and full marks to England for keeping their composure and doing that, it will need a lot of character to come to the fore and to bounce back in the series,' he added, as quoted from ICC. 'Now, whether Bumrah plays or doesn't play, one doesn't know. But let's hope he does because this is a very important Test match and all is not lost,' he noted. 'It's just you take it one game at a time. It's a five-match series and India will be hoping to bounce back,' Shastri added. Shastri believes newly appointed skipper Shubman Gill will have learnt plenty from India's loss in the series opener and expects the young leader to be more proactive for the remainder of the series. 'People say he was a little reactive and it can happen when you're playing your first Test match (as captain) and especially in such good batting conditions with a fast outfield and things can happen in that way,' Shastri said. 'But he would have learnt a lot from that and will want to be a little more proactive when it comes now, which means the bowlers and the fielders will have to give him that support,' he noted. 'They have got to know what their role is and get out there and execute it,' he said. (ANI)


Time of India
18 minutes ago
- Time of India
Wimbledon 2025: More to learn! Indian-American Nishesh Basavareddy bows out in opening round
Nishesh Basavareddy London: Maybe it was the heat, at 32 degrees, the hottest opening day in the history of the tournament. Maybe it was his opponent, the 19-year-old left-hander, Learner Tien, who knows how to grind, whatever the surface or conditions. Or it could just be that things came to a boil for the 20-year-old Nishesh Basavareddy in his Wimbledon main draw debut on Monday. The 5ft 11' Indian-American led 4-1 and 5-2 in the opening set, and had three set points in the ninth game when he was serving for an early advantage, and then again a couple more in the next game. Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW! Basavareddy, who studied data analysis in Stanford, before putting a pause to his college education in December, made some nervous choices in shot selection in the twohour 10-minute encounter. The one that stood out came on his second set point, the 20-year-old went up for a dropshot on the backhand side and the ball didn't even reach the net. Tien, who sparkled under the London sun, particularly on longer points, came through 7-6 (5),6-3, 6-2. 'That drop shot was a little bit of a bailout shot, I should have played the point better, waited for my chance,' Basavareddy said. 'I succumbed to the pressure he put on me. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Start Here - 2025 Top Trend Local network access control Esseps Learn More Undo The first set was a good level, but I need to get better physically. I had a lot of chances in the first set, five chances, and had I taken one of them, it could've been different.' There was no coming back from the vicissitudes of the 67-minute set on a blazing hot day. Basavareddy, who appeared rattled as the match slipped from his grasp, talking to himself and his team, couldn't turn it around even after a prolonged bathroom break after the second set. Tien and Basavareddy, born in Irvine and Newport Beach in California, some seven miles apart, are also separated by seven months in age, and are among the new wave of American players. They first faced each other over a decade ago in an U-8 tournament in the USA and Basavareddy finished on top on that occasion. This is the duo's first meeting at a Tour-level event, but they met twice in Challengers last year and Tien, ranked 62 to Basavareddy's 100, came out on top both times. Game On Season 1 continues with Mirabai Chanu's inspiring story. Watch Episode 2 here.