
India Vs England Live Streaming, 4th Test: How To Watch Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy Coverage On TV And Online
India vs England 4th Test Live Streaming: The historic Old Trafford ground in Manchester plays host to the penultimate Test of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy from Wednesday, July 23. While India strive to bounce back from their painstaking defeat at Lord's and draw level at 2-2, the hosts will aim to seal the fate of the series with a decisive lead.
India would believe they missed a great opportunity to be in England's place after falling at crucial junctures at Lord's, where they equalised scores in the first half but finished 22 runs short in the chase of 193 on the final afternoon. How they overcome their relative lack of experience as a batting unit and inability to stitch together consistent spells with the ball will determine whether or not Shubman Gill's men set up the decider against Ben Stokes' brigade at The Oval.
The 4th Test between England and India will be played from Wednesday, July 23, at Old Trafford, Manchester. The match will start at 3:30 PM IST.
The 4th Test between England and India will be televised in India on the Sony Sports Network.
The live streaming of India vs England 4th Test will be available on the Jio Hotstar app and website.
What time will the toss for IND vs ENG 4th Test be held?
The toss for India vs England 4th Test will take place at 3:00 PM IST.
What are the full squads for IND vs ENG 4th Test?
India: Shubman Gill (c), Rishabh Pant (vc & wk), Yashasvi Jaiswal, KL Rahul, Sai Sudharsan, Abhimanyu Easwaran, Karun Nair, Ravindra Jadeja, Dhruv Jurel (wk), Washington Sundar, Shardul Thakur, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohd. Siraj, Prasidh Krishna, Akash Deep, Kuldeep Yadav, Anshul Kamboj
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Hindustan Times
27 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
At Oval, India finally shake hands with English cricket
For the Indian team, the Oval Test is when they finally came face to face with English cricket conditions they had expected on the tour. The situation, after almost two months on the road (and four energy sapping games across England during an unusually hot summer) was similar to going to a big party where you meet the host only as you are about to leave. Ben Stokes and Ravindra Jadeja shake hands for a draw on day five of the fourth Test in Manchester. (AFP) At Old Trafford, Jadeja famously refused a handshake with Stokes to make a point. At the Oval, India could not turn down the handshake with English cricket. Cricket, more than other sports, is impacted by conditions – the nature of the pitch and nature itself, heat, breeze, humidity, moisture, cloud cover. Conditions vary from country to country and the challenge of playing in India and overseas is starkly different. For Indian batters used to slow and low pitches, batting in England can be particularly tricky. The magic mantra is to reboot technique – play late, don't go hard at the ball. Play with soft hands, close to the body. Abandon all thoughts of hitting through the line. With grey skies, green wickets, swinging/seaming conditions in England, batters with weak techniques get found out. That is why success here brings respect and is a tick on the CV. This tour, England caught India by surprise. India played four Tests in England in (almost) Indian conditions, in grounds with large number of Indian fans – it was home away from home. But the Oval flicked the switch. The wicket was green, not brown. The light has been dull for long periods on the first three days. The pitch has been spicy and seaming, not batting friendly. The ball has moved, jumped and come to batters in crooked, wobbly lines instead of staying straight. Plus the rain and spitting drizzle resulted in a stop-start kind of play, the situation batters dread. When you play, come off and restart, batters are never 'in'. It's like being on zero all the time. But the batters' nightmare made for riveting, compelling cricket. After the run feast in the previous four Tests this was bat versus ball on more equal terms. The ball repeatedly sailed past the edge, which reminded one of the classic comment about a batsman who kept getting beaten but not edging. Noticing the growing frustration of his bowler the captain comforted him. 'Be patient,' he said, 'he will nick it soon as he gets his eye in.' Batters hate interruptions but spectators in England take such pauses in their stride. Soon as the umpires walk off and the ground staff start wheeling in the covers, long queues build around bars and food stalls. They know from experience that rain breaks are part of the game as much as basic uncertainty (it takes one ball to dismiss a player), the law of averages (Bradman made a zero in his last Test innings) and sledging. What would cricket be if there was no on-field needle (Gill versus Crawley, Akash Deep versus Duckett, Prasidh Krishna versus Root) and 'off-field' flare ups (Gambhir versus curator). In a way, it is fitting that India met typical England cricket at the Oval, the scene of their famous first ever series win against England in 1971. Chandrasekhar's 6/38 is etched in our cricket history as is Gavaskar's epic 221 during a fourth innings chase. The Oval, home of Surrey, has a proud history dating back to 1864 when it first won the County championship. At present it is the best performing team, having won the County championship the last three years. Ollie Pope is captain, Sam Curran is a key player and Sai Sudharsan a contracted foreign professional. Over the years, Surrey has had a long list of greats. Batsmen: Ken Barrington (Test avg 58.67), John Edrich (Test triple hundred) and Peter May (England captain). Bowlers: Alec Bedser (1,500 first class wickets) and Jim Laker (19 wickets in one Test). Surrey's greatest star is Jack Hobbs, who scored almost 61,000 first-class runs, including a staggering 197 hundreds, half of these after the age of 40. Interestingly, besides its cricket success, Surrey is one of the few Counties that is commercially profitable. The Oval has successfully monetised its infrastructure and smartly combined cricket and commerce to generate revenue. In London, The Oval and Lord's are only a short distance apart but miles away in character and culture. Lord's is aloof, intimidating, exclusive; Oval functional, friendly, accessible and accepting. It has an India hall, an Australia suite and a West Indies room and hospitality boxes named after Clive Lloyd and Dennis Lillee. The contributions of Intikhab Alam, Kumar Sangakkara and Hashim Amla are recognised and respected. But Lord's stands alone in terms of its history and brand value. The Oval team in The Hundred went to MI for around £60 million. Lord's was bought by a US-based tech group for a whopping £149 million.


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Yashasvi Jaiswals 118-run knock guides India to 304/6 against England at Tea on Day 5; visitors lead by 281 runs
London [UK], August 2 (ANI): Young Indian opener Yashasvi Jaiswal's exceptional innings of 118 runs gave India an upper hand after the end of the second session in the fifth and final Test of the Anderson Tendulkar Trophy 2025, which is being played at the Kennington Oval in London on Saturday. At the stroke of Tea on Day 3 of The Oval Test, Team India are 304/6 with Ravindra Jadeja and Dhruv Jurel unbeaten on the crease. After the end of the session, the Shubman Gill-led side led by 281 runs. The visitors started the second session from 189/4 with Jaiswal (85*) and Gill (11*) unbeaten on the crease. India didn't have a good start to the session as they lost the wicket of Gill (11 runs off 9 balls). He was dismissed by the bowling of Gus Atkinson. Team India touched the 200-run mark in their 48th over. In the 51st over, Yashasvi Jaiswal completed his ton in 127 balls. In the 55th over at the score of 229, Karun Nair (17 runs from 32 balls) was sent back to the pavilion as he was dismissed by Atkinson. On the fourth ball of the 58th over, Jaiswal slammed a boundary, which brought his team's 250 in the innings. In the 65th over at the score of 273, Jaiswal (118 runs in 164 balls) was dismissed on the bowling of Josh Tongue. Following Jaiswal's dismissal, the team's wicketkeeper-batter Dhruv Jurel came out to bat. He joined left-hand batter Ravindra Jadeja on the crease. The Indian cricket team touched the 300-run mark just before Tea as Jurel smashed 13 runs in an over, which was bowled by Tongue. Both batters, Jurel and Jadeja, built an unbeaten 31(40) partnership before going back after the end of the second session. For the Three Lions so far, Atkinson has snapped three wickets (3/99 in 23 overs), Tounge has grabbed two wickets (2/100 in 26 overs), and Jamie Overton has bagged one wicket (1/74 in 18 overs) in their respective spells. Earlier, India started Day 3 on 75/2, with Yashasvi Jaiswal (51*) and night-watchman Akash Deep (4*) unbeaten on the crease, leading by 52 runs. Jaiswal carried on his good form from overnight; meanwhile, England have endured an innings to forget in the field, dropping as many as four catches. India crossed the 100-run mark in the 23rd over. Jaiswal pushed the ball for a couple of runs off Gus Atkinson. In the 30th over, the duo of Jaiswal and Deep completed a 50-run stand for the third wicket. Deep slammed a four off Atkinson to bring up his maiden fifty in Test cricket. This was the 18th hundred partnership in this series, the most in a Test series in this century (since 2000), surpassing 17 in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in 2003-04. Indian skipper Shubman Gill joined Jaiswal after the departure of Deep. Earlier in the match, four-wicket hauls from Mohammed Siraj and Prasidh Krishna and an attacking half-century from Yashasvi Jaiswal put India at the driver's seat at the end of the second day's play during the fifth Test against England at The Oval on Friday. At the end of the day's play, India was 75/2, with Jaiswal (51*) and night-watchman Akash Deep (4*) unbeaten. They lead by 52 runs. In their first innings, England had scored 247 in response to India's 224. However, Prasidh Krishna (4/62) and Mohammed Siraj (4/86) bowled exceptionally well to deny England a massive lead and triggered a batting collapse. The final session of the day kicked off with England being 215/7, with Harry Brook (33*) joined by Gus Atkinson, a capable lower-order hitter. Brief Scores: India: 224 and 304/6 (Yashasvi Jaiswal 118, Akash Deep 66; Gus Atkinson 3/99) vs England: 247 (Zak Crawley 64, Harry Brook 53; Prasidh Krishna 4/62). (ANI)