
"It was a good score in 1st innings...": Root following day two of play at Lord's
A fighting half-century from KL Rahul and the return of wicketkeeper-batter Rishabh Pant as a batter following a finger injury were key positives as India ended day two with two more wickets lost during the third Test against Lord's on Friday. At the end of the day's play, India was 145/3, with Pant (19*) and Rahul (53*) unbeaten.
They trail by 242 runs in response to England's first innings 387, made thanks to a century stand between Root (104) and Ollie Pope (44) and a counter-attacking 82-run stand between Brydon Carse and Jamie Smith, who both struck fifties down the order.
Speaking at the post-day presser, "I think it's a good score. I think we will have a better indication when they finish their innings."
"But I do feel generally here the pitch plays best day two, and it is going to be very hot, very dry. It is already very slow."
"It generally goes up and down and offers something later on in the game. So the fact we have got those runs on the board I think is crucial. There were two brilliant partnerships today," he continued.
Root hailed the lower-order stand between Carse and Smith, especially the latter's current form and overall skillset.
Root also said with the ground having a slope, there is something for bowlers even though pitch feels placid and ball gets soft.
"And if the ball does go out of shape and we get a new one a bit harder and a fresher one then we exploit that as well. But I think it's another good day for us," he continued.
Root was happy with the return of express pacer Jofra Archer, saying that it was just nice seeing him play Test cricket again and enjoy his game. He also called the bowler an "X-Factor" player.
"He has shown that when he's played white ball cricket for England, when it is in the IPL, big games he turns up and he does things that other players can't. And you saw that in a short burst today."
"So I do think he is going to play a big part with the rest of the group. And I think one thing that you will say about it is he compliments nicely the rest of the attack. And at different points throughout the game, they are all going to have to work together and play their part in taking these 20 wickets if we are going to win this game," he added.
On the pitch's behavior in days to come, Root said that he doesn't see it getting better and there might be a "little bit of turn" as the game proceeds, for spin bowlers.
"I think it's going to be quite turgid. I think it's going to be quite slow scoring, unless you get someone like Rishabh who comes out and plays a very aggressive style of batting where it takes quite a lot of unorthodox methods. You could see it as a slightly more old-school kind of test match," he added.
Root feels the match is nicely poised and termed skipper Shubman Gill's wicket as a "big one".
"Clearly a player in great form, good player anyway, but in serious form. Really important wicket for us. I think just good thinking, good skill to be able to execute it as well. A great catch, unbelievable catch (by Jamie)," he added.
Resuming the final session at 44/1, Nair (18) and Rahul (13) continued to play positively, with Nair finding a couple of boundaries. The duo reached their 50-run stand in 95 balls.
However, once again, the Karnataka batter, who made his return to Test side after eight years, failed to capitalise on his start, falling to skipper Ben Stokes with a catch from Joe Root at slips.
Nair was gone for 40 in 62 balls, with four boundaries. India was 74/2, with a 61-run stand being undone by the skipper.
Skipper Shubman Gill joined KL at the crease, and the duo took India to the 100-run mark in 29.1 overs, with minimal risks. However, their 33-run partnership was ended by Chris Woakes, as Gill produced a faint edge that reached keeper Jamie Smith's hands. The skipper was gone for 16. India was at 107/3.
To the relief of Indian players and fans alike, Rishabh Pant was next up on the crease and punished Shoaib Bashir with three boundaries within no time, unaffected by his finger injury.
KL continued his fine run in the series, bringing up his second fifty of the series in 97 balls, with five fours.
KL and Rishabh made sure that the team ended the day without any further loss of wickets.

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Times of Oman
4 hours ago
- Times of Oman
Carse's stunning spell leaves India at disadvantage, India post 58/4 while chasing 193
London: A spell of terror by pacer Brydon Carse and a last-minute 'Ben Stokes miracle' put India at a huge psychological and statistical disadvantage as the hosts ended the day four in a severly disadvantaged spot at 58/4 while chasing 193 runs during the third Test against Lord's on Sunday. At the end of day's play, KL was left unscathed at 33*. While stars like Rishabh Pant, Ravindra Jadeja, Nitish Kumar Reddy and Washington Sundar are yet to come and deliver their services as a batter, losing four wickets this early has put India under severe pressure. At the final session, England started at 175/6, with skipper Ben Stokes and Chris Woakes unbeaten at 27* and 8* respectively. Washington Sundar continued running through England's key players, with his delivery crashing into Stokes' middle-stump, removing him for 33 in 96 balls, with three fours. England was 181/7. After a long grind throughout the day, Jasprit Bumrah was finally among the wickets as he removed Brydon Carse (1) and Chris Woakes (10) in quick succession, England was reduced to 185/9. Sundar, who changed the game for his side, fittingly took Jofra Archer's wicket, completing his four wicket haul, bundling out England for 192 in 62 overs. Sundar (4/22) was sensational with the ball, while Bumrah (2/38) and Siraj (2/31) also bowled brilliantly. Nitish Kumar Reddy and Akash also made it to the wicket charts with one-piece each. During the run-chase of 193 runs, Jofra Archer delivered England just the start they needed, as he once again got better of opener Yashasvi Jaiswal, as an uncontrolled attempt at pull shot landed straight into Jamie Smith's hands, removing him for a seven-ball duck. India was 5/1. KL Rahul was joined by Karun Nair on the other end. Rahul, who had scored a century just during the last innings, looked in sublime touch as he continued to find boundaries against Woakes and Archer. Carse started his reign of terror against India as he broke the prospering 36-run stand between the duo, trapping Nair lbw for 14. He also continued to get better of skipper Shubman Gill on numerous occasions, before finally trapping him lbw as well for just six, making this outing a failure for the captain. India sunk to 53/3. Akash joined KL as a nightwatchman. At one point, while he was receiving some medical attention, Stokes exchanged a few words with KL and clapped his hands, referring to the sledging Gill-led Indians had put his openers Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett during final few moments of day four. but just before day end, skipper Stokes produced the wicket his side needed to put India on psychological disadvantage, removing the nightwatchman for just 1. India ended the day with KL unbeaten. Earlier, at the stroke of tea, England crawled to 175/6 in 52 overs with captain Stokes and Woakes unbeaten with scores of 27(83) and 8(23), respectively. Root and Stokes resumed their grind while Indian quicks hunted in packs for the breakthrough. Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj bowled in tandem, barreled in to induce false shots, but returned empty-handed. While pacers could not collect the reward for all their hard work, off-spinner Sundar took the mantle and broke the 67-run partnership by exploiting the rough to his advantage. The sweep shot came back to haunt England after Sundar managed to sneak the ball past Root's swinging blade to rattle the exposed leg stump. As Root returned on 40(96), Jamie Smith joined hands with Stokes to stitch England's return. The in-form Jamie Smith lasted just 14 balls after Sundar intensified the pressure. He made Smith rush to defend the ball. Smith played for the turn, but the ball kept straight and crashed into the stumps, forcing the 23-year-old to return cheaply on 8(14). Throughout the second session, fortune favoured Root, but he failed to make the most of it. On the first ball after lunch, Root received an unprecedented lifeline after Akash Deep lured the talismanic English batter to give away an edge. However, wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel failed to pouch it, and even if he did, it would have gone in vain after umpire Paul Reiffel indicated a foot no-ball. In the 38th over, Root survived a close call for the second time, after he tried to shuffle across but got pinned by Siraj in front of the middle stump. After the umpire turned down India's lively appeal, India captain Shubman Gill decided to take the decision upstairs. The review showed that the ball brushed the leg stump, which ensured Root's survival, due to the umpire's call. The hosts showed signs of returning unscathed, but Sundar brought thunder down the ground by casting a spell with his spin craft. He forced England to switch from 'Bazball' to a defensive brand of cricket. Earlier, England started Day 4 on 2/0 with Zak Crawley (2) and Ben Duckett (0*) unbeaten on the crease. Mohammed Siraj gave the host an early blow as he removed Duckett for 12 in the 6th over, and Ollie Pope joined Crawley in the middle. Just before drinks in the first session, Siraj grabbed his second wicket of the innings by removing Pope for just four. At drinks, England were 42/2 with Zak Crawley 17 (43) unbeaten on the crease. Joe Root joined Crawley in the middle, and England crossed the 50-run mark in the 15th over after Root pushed the ball towards deep point for a single. Nitish Kumar Reddy removed Crawley for 22 runs off 49 balls, including four fours. Crawley's drought for runs in the series continues. Harry Brook came to the crease after Crawley's wicket. Brook took on Indian bowlers as he hurried on to 23 off just 17 balls. Akash Deep took his first wicket of the match as he cleaned up Brook for 23, and England skipper Ben Stokes joined Root in the middle. Earlier in the match, Opener KL Rahul's ton and left-hand batter Ravindra Jadeja's 72 helped India to level the score at 387 on Saturday at Lord's, which was also set up by England in the first innings of the Test match. England's skipper Ben Stokes won the toss and elected to bat first. Batting first, the Three Lions scored 387 runs thanks to a century stand between Root (104) and Ollie Pope (44) and a counter-attacking 82-run stand between Brydon Carse and Jamie Smith, who both struck fifties down the order. England: 387 and 192: (Joe Root 40, Ben Stokes 33, Washington Sundar 4/22) vs India: 387 and 58/4 (KL Rahul 33*, Karun Nair 14, Brydon Carse 2/11). (ANI)


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4 hours ago
- Times of Oman
Sinner avenges French Open heartbreak, beats Alcaraz to capture maiden Wimbledon title
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Observer
13 hours ago
- Observer
England bounce back against India
London: Chasing a target of 193, India ended Day 4 in deep trouble at 58 for 4 in their second innings against England in the third Test at Lord's on Sunday. At stumps, KL Rahul stood firm on 33 (not out), while night-watchman Akash Deep was bowled by England skipper Ben Stokes off the final delivery of the day — a blow that left India trailing by 135 runs heading into a tense final day. India's top order faltered under pressure, with Yashasvi Jaiswal falling for a duck, Karun Nair dismissed for 14, and captain Shubman Gill managing only 6 as England's bowlers made early inroads in the low-scoring chase. Earlier in the day, England were dismissed for 192 in their second innings, lasting 62.1 overs. Washington Sundar led India's bowling effort with a superb spell of 4 for 22, while Mohammed Siraj (2/31) and Jasprit Bumrah (2/38) picked up two wickets apiece. Akash Deep chipped in with one. Resuming the third session at 175 for 6, England lost their final four wickets for just 17 runs. Washington struck early after tea to remove Ben Stokes for 33 and later wrapped up the innings by bowling Shoaib Bashir (2). Bumrah claimed the wickets of Chris Woakes (10) and Brydon Carse (1) to complete a disciplined effort by the Indian attack. Sundar took four wickets, including the prize scalps of Joe Root, Jamie Smith and England captain Ben Stokes. Root and Stokes kept India at bay for much of the afternoon's play after coming together shortly before lunch with England in trouble at 87-4. But a partnership worth 67 ended when Root, who made a hundred in the first innings, was bowled behind his legs for 40 after missing a sweep against Sundar. New batsman Smith's three previous scores this series had been 184 not out, 88 and 51. But the wicketkeeper managed just eight before he was bowled by a Sundar delivery that kept a touch low. Sundar, on an increasingly helpful pitch, had now taken two wickets for three runs in 11 balls, with England 164-6. All-rounder Stokes, without a Test hundred in over two years, demonstrated great discipline while batting throughout all of Sunday's second session. But, in common with several England team-mates, he gave his wicket away when on 33 the left-handed batsman swung himself off his feet trying to slog Sundar and was clean bowled. Washington Sundar celebrates with Ravindra Jadeja after taking the wicket of England's Joe Root. Stokes banged his bat on the turf in anger, with England now 181-7. And that became 182-8 when Jasprit Bumrah, the world's top-ranked Test bowler, took his first wicket of the innings with a yorker that was too good for Brydon Carse. Bumrah then bowled Chris Woakes with a superb delivery that seamed in down the slope to clip leg stump before Sundar knocked over last man Shoaib Bashir's stumps to end the innings. England resumed on 2-0 with Zak Crawley, who had angered India late Saturday with his time-wasting tactics, alongside opening partner Ben Duckett. Duckett scooped a four off Mohammed Siraj but the fast bowler soon had his revenge when the left-hander, cramped for room, miscued a pull to Bumrah at mid-on to leave England 22-1. Siraj then risked disciplinary action after yelling in Duckett's face, with both players likely to attract the attention of match referee Richie Richardson after making shoulder contact. Crawley and Ollie Pope were then both fortunate to survive probing deliveries from Bumrah, who took 5-74 in England's first innings after being rested from India's win at Edgbaston that levelled this five-match series at 1-1. — Agencies