
Injured Pant bats on as India move on to 321-6 in fourth Test
The Board of Control for Cricket in India announced Pant was ruled out of keeping wicket at Old Trafford.
But they added Pant, who has been one of India's outstanding players during the five-match series, racking up 462 runs in seven innings so far, would bat "as per team requirements".
And after Shardul Thakur fell for 41, with India 314-6, Pant slowly made his way down the dressing room steps and out into the middle.
Pant's opening ball Thursday saw him prod tentatively at a wide delivery, from England captain Ben Stokes, with the left-hander clearly struggling to move.
He was then comprehensively beaten by the next delivery.
Runners are no longer allowed in international cricket and Pant added two runs in seven balls faced Thursday to be 39 not out when rain stopped play 10 minutes before lunch.
India resumed on 264-4 after Stokes went against history by sending the tourists in to bat. No team winning the toss and bowling first has ever won a Test at Old Trafford.
But India, 2-1 down in a five-match contest, needed to make some history of their own if they were to maintain their hopes of a series victory as they had yet to win any of their previous nine Tests at Old Trafford.
And with play resuming in overcast, bowler-friendly conditions, India soon slumped to 266-5 as Jofra Archer struck with just his fifth ball of the day.
Ravindra Jadeja, on a run of four successive fifties this series, had added just one to his overnight 19 when he was undone by a superb Archer ball that moved sharply to take the outside edge, with second slip Harry Brook holding a fine low catch to his right.
Thakur, one of three changes to the India side, counter-attacked by smashing a short ball from Woakes through cover for a commanding four.
But his useful innings of 41 ended when Stokes once again proved himself a partnership breaker, although he needed considerable help from a leaping Ben Duckett at gully after Thakur edged a booming drive.
Hashtags

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


France 24
5 hours ago
- France 24
Stokes strikes as England finally see off India's KL Rahul in fourth Test
The match had already been a personal triumph for the all-rounder after he became just the fourth England cricketer to score a hundred and take five wickets in the same Test. Stokes made 141 -- his first Test century in more than two years -- in England's mammoth 669 following a return of 5-72 in India's first-innings 358. This match has also seen Stokes become just the third cricketer in Test history to score 7,000 runs and take 200 wickets after West Indies Garry Sobers and South Africa's Jacques Kallis. But Stokes, who suffered from cramp while batting, did not bowl at all during the 63 overs India faced their second innings on Saturday's fourth day as they recovered from 0-2 to 174-2 at stumps, still a deficit of 137 runs. Rahul was 87 not out at Saturday's close, with skipper Shubman Gill 78 not out. Stokes was also seen repeatedly clutching the top of his leg, having had surgery on his left hamstring at the start of this year. But with England pressing for a win that would give them an unassailable 3-1 lead in this five-match series ahead of next week's finale at the Oval, Stokes brought himself on to bowl at the start of Sunday's play. Already the leading bowler on either side this series with 16 wickets at 24.75, Stokes almost had Gill caught for 81 by a leaping Ollie Pope at short cover. But the inspirational captain did separate India's stubborn second-wicket duo when he had Rahul, in sight of his third century of the series, plumb lbw for 90 with a nip-back ball that kept a touch low. Rahul had batted for over five hours, facing 230 balls, but India were now 188-3. Fast-medium bowler Stokes, still grabbing the top of his left leg on occasion as well as his right shoulder, then somehow defied a docile surface when a rising delivery popped off a good length to rap Gill, then on 90, on the thumb before deflecting into the side of the batsman's helmet. Gill, who has already scored three hundreds in his first series as India captain, needed several minutes' on-field treatment before resuming his innings. Stokes bowled an unchanged spell of 1-12 in eight overs until the advent of the new ball. Chris Woakes, who had reduced India to 0-2 in the first over of the innings, then came back on with India 198-3 off 80 overs. © 2025 AFP


France 24
12 hours ago
- France 24
Australia beat WIndies by three wickets in fourth T20I match
West Indies were 205 for nine after being sent to bat first after the visitors won the toss, but took five wickets after the midpoint to keep the pressure on Australia chasing 206 to win. The Aussies seized a 4-0 lead in the five-match series and can complete a sweep by winning Monday's finale at Warner Park. Green struck his half-century off 35 balls with three sixes and three fours while Inglis had one six and 10 fours in 30 balls and Glenn Maxwell had 47 runs off 18 balls, hitting six sixes and a four. But a night after Tim David bashed Australia's fastest T20I century off only 37 balls, he was rested from the Aussie lineup and the chase had some tense moments. Australia's Mitchell Marsh was out lbw for a second-ball duck from West Indies left-arm fast-medium pace bowler Jediah Blades. Inglis entered to partner with Maxwell but flew out to deep backward square, caught by Sherfane Rutherford off a ball from Romario Shepherd to start the seventh over, leaving the Aussies on 66 for two. The visitors reached 129 for two at the drinks break but on the next ball to start the 11th over, Maxwell was caught by Jason Holder at long on from a Akeal Hosein delivery. Blades bowled Mitchell Owen for two thanks to Rutherford's deep cover grab and two balls later Blades got his third wicket, sending off Cooper Connolly for a duck on Holder's mid-off catch, the Aussies stuck on 134 for five. Holder took Aaron Hardie for 23 on a long off catch by Shimron Hetmyer to open the 17th over with the Aussies still 21 runs from victory. A drive by Green deflected off Shepherd's fingers and into the stumps of Xavier Bartlett out of his ground, his seventh wicket gone for nine and the Aussies two runs from victory. Green, however, scored runs off the next two deliveries and Sean Abbott pushed Australia across the line, scoring the final run with four balls to spare. Aussie fielding solid West Indies managed only a top score of 31 as Aussie fielders shone. Bartlett bowled out Brandon King for 18 when he chipped out midwicket to Hardie and removed Shai Hope for 10 after Maxwell made a diving catch mid-on. Maxwell made a one-handed grab to retire Roston Chase for nil off a Hardie delivery, leaving West Indies on 42 for three only one ball into the fifth over. Rutherford went out for 31 when caught by Marsh at backward point off a nice delivery from Adam Zampa to make it 67 for four. Owen made a diving catch at deep backward point to retire Hetmyer on 16. Maxwell struck again for the seventh wicket, flicking the ball before going over the boundary so Green could make the catch and send off Shepherd on 28. Green then caught Matthew Forde for 15 to put the West Indies on 184 for eight.


France 24
18 hours ago
- France 24
Bournemouth stroll past Everton in Premier League friendly
Goals from Philip Billing, Dango Outtara and Daniel Adu-Adjei sealed a comfortable win for Andoni Iraola's Bournemouth side in a game played in sweltering conditions. After a low-key first half, Billing fired Bournemouth into the lead in the 55th minute, gliding away from his marker at the edge of the area before unleashing a ferocious shot that flew past Everton goalkeeper Jordan Pickford. England international Pickford was beaten again four minutes later after a move that began when Outtara surged clear down the left flank. Everton defender Nathan Patterson looked to have covered the danger, but a poor touch allowed Burkina Faso international Outtara to hammer a shot high into the net past Pickford's near post. Adu-Adjei made it 3-0 to the Cherries in the 69th minute, pouncing on an underhit backpass from Jake O'Brien to coolly finish past Pickford. The four-team Premier League-backed tournament continues later Saturday with Manchester United taking on West Ham at the same venue.