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Finger pointing and anger as tempers fray between England and India

Finger pointing and anger as tempers fray between England and India

The Age3 days ago
It enraged India but they could not really take the moral high ground after their batsmen took unscheduled drinks, nipped off to go to the loo or called on the physio as the cricket became as still as the air in the July heatwave. Over the past two days combined, 25 have been unbowled and the officials have done nothing about it.
It could be crucial lost time that prevents a result, even for the draw-phobic Bazballers. They now face the challenge of scoring quickly enough to set a target against Bumrah and two spinners on a wearing pitch. It has the makings of an England collapse and India snatching the game but we could also be in for a classic, tense finish on day five.
On a day of old-school Test cricket, England were grateful again for Ben Stokes as they so after are on big occasions at Lord's. With an outrageous runout and two spells of 90mph bowling – one of seven overs that lasted longer than the women's final at Wimbledon – he broke the door down only for India's bloody-mindedness to slam it shut again.
KL Rahul's 10th Test hundred, his second at Lord's, was the backbone of India's innings but it was fortified by two meaty stands in the lower order from the bowling all-rounders Ravi Jadeja and Washington Sundar.
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A blistering spell of fast bowling from Jofra Archer averaging 90.3mph, his quickest on record in Test cricket, bolstered his return and he bowled better than two for 52, but a sign of his value was not just his pace but the fact he went at just 2.2 an over, the quickest and most economical bowler in the match.
Wickets have been hard for England all series. India have made more than 350 in every innings and each time England have been forced to take the second new ball. The Australians only had to take the new ball twice in their five-match series with India earlier this year. It is a factor that illustrates how pitches in both countries have changed.
In England it is a combination of the fragile Dukes ball losing its shape, the surfaces lacking pace and carry and the summer's hot weather.
It adds up to a lot of hard graft for England. Stokes loves what he calls 'a day in the dirt' and he snatched the attention with a superb runout of Rishabh Pant on the stroke of lunch.
Pant was trying to get Rahul on strike on 98 so he could make his century before the break but it is dangerous to take on Stokes. He picked the ball up at cover point and on the turn threw the stumps down.
From nowhere, England had their first wicket of the day two minutes before the end of the first session. It sparked panic. Rahul completed his hundred soon after the restart but was lured into a drive by Shoaib Bashir's flight and was caught at slip for 100. Bashir was bowling nicely, but injured his left little finger trying to take a return catch off Jadeja and never reappeared, although England are confident he will be available for the second innings.
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Four times England had opportunities for runouts. Twice they could have knocked over Nitish Kumar Reddy on nought, again on 18 and Jadeja when he had five. Twice Ollie Pope snatched at chances when he had time to gather himself and aim. On a day when wickets had to be bought with sweat and tears, they were golden chances that would have given England a crucial first-innings lead.
This India side is stubborn, and determined not to repeat the collapses of Headingley that cost them the first Test. Another stubborn 50 stand brought them close to parity until Woakes strangled Jadeja down the leg side.
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England's Hundred will have strong Australian accent
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Hilton Cartwright's late call-up by Southern Brave has taken to 24 the number of Australians who will figure in this year's Hundred, the controversial white-ball franchise competition that has divided English cricket. The 31-year-old Western Australia and Melbourne Stars allrounder, capped at Test and ODI level in 2017, is an injury replacement for South African Faf du Plessis. When the competition begins on 5 August most matches will feature an Aussie accent with 13 of the 16 teams signing an Australian. Only one women's team, Brave, are without one, with 15 Australian women selected. Birmingham Phoenix, Northern Superchargers and Trent Rockets all used their full complement of three overseas players to sign Australian women. The in-demand nature of Australia's all-conquering women's team is reflected in the salaries they will receive. Six will each receive the top-tier Stg 65,000 ($A135,000) fee - Ellyse Perry, Georgia Voll, Annabel Sutherland, Phoebe Litchfield, Ash Gardner and Grace Harris, with a further five collecting the second-level Stg 50,000 ($A102,500). Fewer of the current leading Australian men have signed up with David Warner, Marcus Stoinis and Steve Smith the big-name recruits. The former will pick up Stg 100,000 ($A205,000), the latter two Stg 120,000 ($A246,000). There are also seven Australian coaches, four with men's teams, including Justin Langer at London Spirit. Also signed in Tuesday's final selection were two Englishmen at opposite ends of their careers: James Anderson, who will be 43 when the tournament starts, and Rocky Flintoff, 17, who has joined the Northern Superchargers team his father, former England allrounder Andrew, coaches. This is the last season before the impact is felt of the sale of large chunks of most teams to private owners. Several have sold stakes to Indian Premier League clubs with Sunrisers Hyderabad buying all of Northern Superchargers from hosts Yorkshire. Created by the England and Wales Cricket Board to attract new fans the competition has been fiercely opposed by traditional supporters who feel it has drawn resources away from the traditional 18-club county structure and imperils the four-day game. However, the ECB feel the sale process, which is set to bring in Stg 520m ($A1.1 billion), valuing the teams collectively at Stg 975m ($A2.0 bn), will save the sport from bankruptcy. However, those 11 counties who do not host a franchise - and most of the Hundred venues also stage Test matches - fear they will be left behind. AUSTRALIANS IN THE HUNDRED Women Ellyse Perry, Megan Schutt, Georgia Voll (Birmingham Phoenix), Grace Harris, Georgia Redmayne (London Spirit), Beth Mooney (Manchester Originals), Phoebe Litchfield, Annabel Sutherland, Georgia Wareham (Northern Superchargers), Amanda-Jade Wellington, Meg Lanning (Oval Invincibles), Ash Gardner, Alana King, Heather Graham (Trent Rockets), Jess Jonassen (Welsh Fire). Men David Warner, Ashton Turner (London Spirit), Ben Dwarshuis (Northern Superchargers), Jason Behrendorff (Oval Invincibles), Hilton Cartwright (Southern Brave), Marcus Stoinis (Trent Rockets), Steve Smith, Riley Meredith, Chris Green (Welsh Fire).

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