
Adil Rashid's superb spell spins England to victory in third T20 against India
Rashid's spell of one for 15 was vital after an English implosion with the bat. Ben Duckett had excelled early on, striking 51 off 28, before Varun Chakravarthy played chief nemesis with figures of five for 25. The visitors were unrelenting in their aggression, a fact welcomed by the hosts as England lost five wickets for 19 runs.
India, however, could never get a proper hold in their reply, the wickets shared by five English bowlers but Rashid the dominant force. Hardik Pandya hit a late 35-ball 40 but Jamie Overton mixed up his pace to collect three wickets and secure a 26-run win.
Jos Buttler's presence at the crease was demanded not long after he lost the toss once again. Pandya was too clever for Phil Salt, his nuance – a fierce bouncer followed by a fuller slower ball – prompting the opener's miscue to cover for five.
Duckett, to England's fortune, found form. This was the left-hander at his Dance Dance Revolution best, bopping around the crease. He scooped Mohammed Shami for six, feasted on Pandya and reverse-swept Washington Sundar for his fifth four in a row. Buttler could sit in the sidecar during their stand of 76.
But Charkravarthy's peril lurked close by. The 33-year-old spinner has long been part of the Indian Premier League but is finally finding global success, England bewildered by him in the past week. The solitary first-class appearance in 2018 adds to the mystery while his bachelor's degree in architecture explains the immaculate lines. Chakravarthy produced an upright seam to have Buttler dismissed for 24, a reverse sweep tickling a catch behind in the ninth over.
When Duckett found deep midwicket off Axar Patel in the following over, the collapse was on. Chakravarthy was in the middle of it, the two Jamies – Smith and Overton – gone with consecutive deliveries in the 14th. Jofra Archer failed to play the googly that granted Chakravarthy five, England having fallen from 108 for three to 127 for eight.
Liam Livingstone heaved away over the on-side for a 24-ball 43, ensuring a competitive second half.
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
The quicks gave England hope with early wickets. Archer rushed Sanju Samson on the pull before taking a fine running catch to dismiss Abhishek Sharma for 24; Mark Wood limited Suryakumar Yadav to 14 after the India captain had flicked Archer over fine leg. The most damaging sight for England in the powerplay was Smith leaving the field during the fourth over after beginning the match with a tight calf, Salt taking the gloves.
The man that mattered was Varma, an unbeaten 72 having won Saturday's second match. A thump through cover off Brydon Carse got him going, pace his friend. But Rashid intervened in his first over. The flighted leg-spinner came back sharply to bowl Varma and leave India four down at the end of the eighth over. Rashid unleashed the revs across his spell, his tossed-up spin more classical than the work of his Indian counterparts, the batters having to settle for singles. By the time he was done with his four overs, India required 82 from 36 balls. Pandya teed off but this was no one-man job.

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


The Sun
11 minutes ago
- The Sun
Chelsea in line for huge transfer windfall as Inter Milan battle Premier League clubs for ex-star who played two games
NOTTINGHAM Forest, Everton and Inter Milan are poised to join the battle to sign Ipswich star Omari Hutchinson. Forest, the Toffees and the Serie A giants are all weighing up whether to make a move after both Leipzig and Brentford lodged £35m bids last month. 4 Relegated Ipswich want more for their biggest asset and hope to generate an auction for Hutchinson. Brentford are tipped to return with an improved offer of £37.5m but are now likely to face even stiffer competition for the England Under-21 international. Hutchinson, 21, did not travel to France for the Tractor Boys' friendly against Auxerre last weekend because of uncertainty about his future. Boss Kieran McKenna said: 'Omari, with the speculation around his future at the moment, he didn't feel mentally in the right place to come for the game. 'It's a challenging situation for everyone. He's a player that we love and we support and we have empathy with, with the year that he's been through and this important moment in his career. 'We'll keep working and communicating on that situation as well and hopefully it'll be the best resolution for the club and for the player.' And a sale of Hutchinson by Ipswich could hand Chelsea a huge PSR boost after another summer spending spree. The England U21 winger played just twice for the Blues, but SunSport understands the West Londoners agreed a 25 per cent sell-on clause before he joined Ipswich. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS 4 4 Hutchinson put himself in the shop window for a big money move last season as one of the few bright sparks in Ipswich's relegation campaign. He further proved his class and maturity with his performances in England U21's Euros-winning tournament. He featured in all six of the young Lions' matches at the tournament, and scored the second goal in their 3-2 victory over Germany in the final.


BBC News
11 minutes ago
- BBC News
Norwich sign striker Lincoln's Makama for £1.2m
Norwich City have completed the signing of striker Jovon Makama from Lincoln City for a fee of £ 21-year-old has joined the Championship club on a three-year contract, with an option for a further two fee is a club record for League One Lincoln, eclipsing the £750,000 they reportedly received from Bolton Wanderers for Scottish midfielder Ethan Erhahon last arrival is part of new Norwich head coach Liam Manning's rebuild at Carrow Road following the departures of forwards Borja Sainz and Jonathan Rowe, to Porto and Marseille he made his debut for the Imps aged 18, Makama has scored 15 goals in 97 appearances, but was left out of their squad for the 2-0 opening-game home win over Reading last Saturday as talks Makama was originally part of the youth set-up at Derby County before he joined Lincoln in 2020, and has also had loan spells at non-league Gainsborough Trinity and Brackley begin their Championship campaign with a home fixture against Millwall on Saturday, 9 August.


Telegraph
21 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Woakes's heroism proves long-form cricket remains the real game
As Chris Woakes showed at The Oval today – going out to bat with a dislocated shoulder hoping to help England stave off defeat by India – cricket occasionally turns up heroism rare in other sports. Woakes was not the first injured player to put his country before himself: Colin Cowdrey famously went out to bat in the closing minutes of the Lord's test against West Indies in 1963 with an arm in plaster, his wrist broken by a vicious bouncer from Wes Hall. Like Woakes, Cowdrey did not need to face a ball, but his guts in going out to the middle, like Woakes's, is undeniable and inspirational. The overall result of the series that finished today – 2-2 with one draw – fairly reflected the capacities of the two teams. However, England, chasing 374 to win, were at one point 332 for 4 and cruising to victory, yet India's attack relentlessly pursued them until the tourists obtained an unlikely triumph. Some of the dismissals that caused England to lose were from exceptional bowling; others were from batting unsuitable to a five-day match in which more than two days remained to score the runs needed to win. This brings us to the paradox of this Test series. As one of the most closely contested since the 2005 Ashes summer, it has excited public interest in serious long-form cricket in a fashion that has been lacking for years. Yet from today, and for the next few weeks, the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) will be trumpeting its Hundred competition, in which each side has only 100 balls in which to slog its way to a higher total than its opponents. In the literal sense, it isn't really cricket: but the people who run the ECB have decided that it is a means of getting more people interested in the game. It is a little like feeding people on tripe and expecting them to move on naturally to fillet steak. The superfluity of short-form cricket – not merely The Hundred but the slightly longer T20 competitions that now proliferate around the world – certainly does pull in crowds, but there is no evidence that these people transfer to the four- or five-day game. What these competitions do achieve is to take the best players away from county cricket's first-class matches, thus making them remarkably unattractive for the public to go to watch. If you are more or less guaranteed not to see any players of international quality, why bother? Also, when players have so little recent first-class experience – such as Jacob Bethell, in the side at the Oval – they fall into the habits of the one-day slogfest, and make silly mistakes that lose matches. The ECB, tin-eared though it has long been, ought to see in the enthusiasm with which this Test series has been received that there is a renewed public appetite for the longer, more thoughtful game. Instead of further truncating the championship programme and marginalising it more by keeping international players out of it, the competition should be given more priority, marketed better and used to re-train Test cricketers in the art of playing long-form cricket. Woakes's heroism was a reminder of the difference between consequential and inconsequential cricket. The public have shown they want more of the former – and it would make better players too.