
'Was Not In The Spirit Of The Game': Shubman Gill Blasts England For 'Time Wasting Tactics' During Lord's Test
With the series tied at 1-1 ahead of the Lord's Test last week, the closely fought third Test between England and India witnessed plenty of drama on the field. This included an animated flare-up between India skipper Shubman and England openers towards the end of the third day of the Test.
After managing to equal England's first innings total of 387, India wanted to squeeze in two overs in the remaining six minutes of play. However, that wasn't possible as the English openers took their time to get ready, and the India captain got involved in a heated discussion with Zak Crawley and then Ben Duckett.
Addressing the pre-match press conference, India skipper cleared the air on the incident between him and England openers.
"Let me clear the air. We had seven minutes of play left, the English batters were 90 seconds late to bat. Not 10,20 but 90. Yes, we would have also liked to bat less in the same situation but there is a manner to do it. I feel what happened was not in the spirit of the game," said Gill.
"It's not something that I am proud of, we had no intention of doing that but there was a build-up to it," he added.
The 25-year-old Gill also confirmed that Rishabh Pant will be keeping the wickets in the 4th Test, after an injury saw Dhruv Jurel replace the left-handed batter in the field at Lords.
With India now trailing 1-2, many are wondering whether Karun Nair's fairytale has come to an end. In what has been his first series since 2017, the right-hand batter has only amassed 131 runs across six innings with a high score of 40.
With both Sai Sudharsan and Abhimanyu Easwaran itching to go, Gill confirmed he is hopeful that Nair will turn around his form and help the team.
"We have had conversations, we think Karun is batting well. He did not play at his number in the first game, It is difficult to make a comeback in a series like this. It is about getting that click, you score a 50 and then can go on to make a big score. We are hopeful he will turn it around," said Gill.

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


Indian Express
2 hours ago
- Indian Express
No help from other end for Jasprit Bumrah… they are little bit greedy: Morne Morkel
The one big reason for India trailing in the fourth Test at Old Trafford is Jasprit Bumrah's failure to take wickets with the new ball, a trend that started in the last Test he played at Birmingham. The blazing start of English openers Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley — scoring 166 runs in 32 overs — pushed England ahead in this decisive Test. According to the Indian bowling coach Morne Morkel, it is the lack of support from the other end that is making it difficult for the team's pace spearhead to get the better of England's top order batsmen. 'For him to be successful, we need to build partnerships. The other guys need to help him out and I think at times, the guys are also trying from the other end, they are a little bit greedy — trying to strive too much and that's how we leak and sort of release that pressure. You can't say anything about Bumrah, he's number one in the world, he's skillful. At times you need help from the other end,' Morkel said. When talking about Day 2 when the game truly slipped out of India's hands because of the worst-bowling day of the tour, Morkel again spoke about leaking runs and bowlers being greedy. He was answering a question about debutant Anshul Kamboj being preferred over Mohammed Siraj with the new ball. 'See if we attack first with Bumrah ad and Siraj up front, then we have to go to less experienced guys at first change. So that is a bit of a tricky one, but looking back at yesterday, you back a guy that's picked on his strength — which being Anshul bowls with the new ball with the best bowler in the world. Siraj has been doing a fantastic job bowling first change. Yesterday our execution let us down, so I think it's not so much to blame on the combinations we went with, it's more the fact that we let ourselves down with our execution. I haven't seen a pitch map where we basically leaked runs, I think 100 runs on both sides, normally like a bit of a split. For me yesterday was either a sign that we were too greedy but we couldn't stick to the plan and then from there we found ourselves chasing the game a little bit.' On the question of Bumrah's workload he said, 'You know, he's the strike bowler, there will be moments that you need to push a guy a little bit harder and longer to get the breakthrough. England has a powerful batting line-up. As a batter, your initial first 20 balls are very crucial and in terms of a guy who can ask questions, he is Bumrah. He is going to be asked a lot of times to come in and do the job for us.'


Hindustan Times
4 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Gill's tactics in tailspin as England dominate
Mumbai: Made to grind in the field for the whole of Day 3, there were lessons aplenty for Indians, none bigger than for Shubman Gill whose captaincy has come under the scanner at Old Trafford. India's captain Shubman Gill leads the team off the field after Day 3 of Manchester Test. (AFP) Still in the nascent stage of his captaincy reign, leading just in his fourth game, this day will give Gill an important lesson — as captain of the Indian team, he would need to show more trust in his spin strength. In Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj, he has a sharp pace attack but in any India bowling unit, there will be good spinners that will have an equally important role to play. Using them effectively is the key. As India's think-tank sits to analyse what transpired on Friday, which England batted through and ended at 544/7, Gill will accept he missed a trick by not attacking with Washington Sundar earlier than when he eventually brought him on. Despite English batters looking largely untroubled against pace in the morning session, it was baffling to see the delay in introducing spin as late as the 62nd over when Ravindra Jadeja was given the ball for the first time on the day. Washington was India's best spinner in the series with big scalps in the previous Test. His confidence was high after a four-wicket haul in his last spell at Lord's. Inexplicably, there was no sign of him till the 69th over. The England batters were not complaining. Their total had swelled to 305/2 and their pair at the crease were well set — Ollie Pope batting on 61 and Root on 45. As it turned out, Washington looked the best Indian bowler on display and was among the wickets straightaway. The well-set Pope was foxed beautifully to induce his edge to KL Rahul at first slip in his fifth over. Two overs later, he struck again when he lured Harry Brook to his doom by having him stumped with a quicker length ball that drew the batter into stepping out. What has made Washington stand out is the amount of drift (2.6 degree) he is getting in English conditions. Pope was beaten by the drift and it was also a hint of drift that forced Brook into a defensive block down the wrong line. In Gill's defence, it can be said that the drawback of too many bowlers, when you prefer to pack the side with all-rounders, is that one or two of them are bound to be underused. Be that as it may, the advantage had been lost by the time the spinners got the opportunity. Among other lessons for the visiting side, there was a masterclass from Joe Root on how to make the start count in these conditions. In their first innings, India's top three of KL Rahul, Yashavi Jaiswal and Sai Sudarshan got starts, but none could capitalise. Starting the day on 11, the veteran showed how it is done. Root converted the half-century into a century and century into 150. Riding on his 248-ball epic (14 fours), Ollie Pope's 71 and captain Ben Stokes 77*, the hosts took firm control of the game. With England already ahead by 186 runs, the best India can hope for is to save the game. The opening session of the day was going to be decisive for India who are trailing 1-2 in the series. However, along with Pope, Root ensured England completely dominated it. At lunch, England were 266/2, a run-rate of 4.50, with Root firmly entrenched on 35 (78b, 5x4) and Pope on 32 (70b, 5x4). Root then combined with Stokes to help England overcome the early hiccup of losing two quick wickets to add 101 runs in the second session to get them to tea on 433/4, increasing the lead to 75. Root was on 121 and Stokes on 36. A thorn in India's flesh, during his innings the Yorkshireman eclipsed a series of records, becoming the second highest run scorer in the history of the game, and now has most hundreds against them — 12. Apart from their spinners taking four of the seven wickets to fall, there was not much to write home about India's bowling attack. The long series is taking its toll on the players. India had scares when their pace weapons Bumrah and Siraj were affected by niggles. Cramps forced England captain Ben Stokes also to retire hurt at the score of 66. All three returned to action later in the day.


India.com
4 hours ago
- India.com
'Very difficult for India...': Former India player opens up over Team India's performance vs England in Manchester
Team India in Manchester Test. (PIC - X) Former India batter Manoj Tiwary is very critical of India's position in the ongoing fourth Test against England at Old Trafford, stating that the team is in no position to even salvage a draw, let alone push for a win. After posting a first innings total of 358, India failed to stop English batters from scoring big as the host are in line to post a hefty lead after Zak Crawley (84) and Ben Duckett (94) set the strong foundation, which was later cashed in by Ollie Pope and Joe Root on the second day after India bowlers failed to make inroads in the first session on Friday. However, Washington Sundar got the better of Pope for 71 after lunch. 'It is going to be difficult for India as England have scored more than 300 runs and they have a batting depth in their playing XI. It will be very difficult for India to drag this match to a draw, forget about winning it. India should focus on drawing this match as if we don't take wickets, the lead will mount and pressure will come on batters,' Tiwari told IANS. The veteran batter urged Indian bowlers to curb the run-scoring and bowl maiden overs to put pressure on England batters. 'We're not able to get wickets as bowlers are not disciplined enough and lack patience. England batters, from this position, look to rotate strike, which makes it difficult for the opposition. We should bowl maidens and stop the run flow. We need to get the remaining wickets as soon as possible to minimise the lead,' Tiwari said. England currently lead the five-match series 2-1 and are well placed to clinch the series.