
Joe Root cannot help but admire ‘a real warrior' Mohammed Siraj: ‘Can see right through his fake-angriness'
Known as one of the most sociable and positive cricketers not only in the English cricket team but in world sport, Joe Root was full of praise for Siraj after he bowled a lung-bursting spell on Day 4, which pushed his tally for the series to more than 180 overs.
Speaking at the press conference, Root spoke about how Siraj's intangibles made him a great team player. 'He's a character. He's a warrior, a real warrior. He's someone you want on your team; he's that kind of character. He gives everything for India, credit to him for that.'
'He's got this fake-angriness…'
Siraj does have an edge that gives him some extra aggression. He is not afraid to celebrate wickets in batters' faces and let them know his thoughts. However, Root recognised that this was just for show and to find rhythm on the pitch, not reflective of his character off it.
Also Read: Mohammed Siraj himself said, 'I want to play and win Oval Test' despite heavy workload: 'He's willing to run in all day'
'The way he approaches cricket, he's got this fake-angriness about him sometimes, which I can see right through. You can tell he's a really nice lad,' said Root.
Nevertheless, the English player was still happy to credit Siraj for his bowling discipline and ability alone, which sometimes go unnoticed behind talks of his heart and effort.
'He tries incredibly hard, he's a very skillful player, and there's a reason he's got the wickets he has, it's because one, his work ethic, and two, his skill level,' explained Root, who scored his 39th century and put England on the path towards victory in a massive partnership with Harry Brook.
'I enjoyed playing against him, he's always got a big smile on his face, and he gives everything for his team. Can't really want anything more as a fan watching, and a great example to any young player starting out,' concluded the English batter, showering praise on a bowler who is set up to finish as the series' highest wicket-taker irrespective of the result.

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Hindustan Times
20 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Siraj emerges from Bumrah's shadows
Mumbai: It almost felt karmic when Mohammed Siraj brought the curtains down on the final Test at The Oval after an enthralling hour's play on Day 5 with his knockout punch – a yorker fired in with a scrambled seam grip to uproot Gus Atkinson's off-stump. As the fast bowler flaunted his imitation of Cristiano Ronaldo's signature celebratory move, the Indian section among the capacity crowd erupted in delirium. India's Mohammed Siraj and Dhruv Jurel celebrate following the team's victory in the fifth Test match against England, at The Oval. (PTI) Cricket Gods are not that cruel after all. If that was the case, Siraj's fielding lapse on Sunday that gave Harry Brook a reprieve on 19 and the rising England star smashed 111 would have remained the lasting image of the Test among the emotional Indian fans. To those who don't stop trying, life gives another chance. If it wasn't so, Siraj would not have got a shot at redemption, having also despaired that he was the last wicket to fall in the Lord's defeat that ended India's batting resistance and gave England the series lead. To help overcome that low, Ravindra Jadeja had asked Siraj to think of his late father – he drove autorickshaw to make ends meet – and how hard he had worked to get here. Siraj looked heavenwards in thanks on completing the win. Siraj was the heartbeat of the team through the gruelling five-Test series packed into six weeks. 'A captain's dream', Shubman Gill called him. The final wicket came in Siraj's 186th over of the series, 47th spell overall. The only fast bowler to play all the Tests and still remain standing. The body protested with aches and pains but the spirit was unbroken. Gill was the Player-of-the-Series for his 754 runs, but India's would not have levelled the series without Siraj's relentless spells. If England felt India were still in the game with only 35 runs to defend and 4 wickets to get, it was because of Siraj. 'When I woke up this morning, I told myself I would change the game. I opened Google, downloaded a 'believe' image and put that as my phone wallpaper,' he said after the match. Siraj had many prized scalps in the series with the wobble seam nipping into right-handers, but to put scoreboard pressure and under grey skies on Monday, he bowled outswingers, slightly wider. That's how he got Jamie Smith, who could have sealed it, but never got the freedom to score. Siraj was so good in the morning that Gill felt, 'they couldn't touch bat on ball'. With so much swing on offer with the old ball, India didn't take the second new ball. The batters would have known Siraj's sucker delivery – the wobble ball that shapes in. Still, Jamie Overton and Atkinson were defeated. Though India won by only six runs this time, they had pushed England into the final hour of the previous Tests. The real test was Sunday evening when Siraj had to lead a three-man pace attack knackered after the pasting by the 195-run stand between centurions Brook and Joe Root. Siraj soldiered on bowling long spells, conducted the crowd and helped set up wickets for Prasidh Krishna at the other end. 'My only plan was to bowl consistently at one spot and to move the ball in and out from there. I didn't want to try too much because that could have released the pressure,' he said. It may sound a cliche, but wickets are often earned by repeating such 'boring' tactics. In Day 4's early exchanges, Siraj beat Ben Duckett five times in an over from over the wicket. Prasidh ramped up pressure by coming in from a different angle, pushing the aggressive left-hander further back to eventually get him with a fuller ball. When Siraj isn't taking wickets - he took 9/190 in the match and 23 in the series – he's setting up batters. As seen during the Border-Gavaskar Trophy where Jasprit Bumrah was exceptional, Siraj unselfishly provided the support cast. 'My job there was to work in partnership with Jassi bhai…how well he was bowling,' he told reporters. 'But I always believe I can get wickets in any situation. Even if I am bowling the eighth over of a spell, I give 100 percent.' In England, Siraj truly emerged from Bumrah's shadows. Both the Tests India won came in Bumrah's absence. And they couldn't have done it without the man who never stopped believing.


Hindustan Times
20 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Shubman Gill lands on both feet as Test captain on trial
New Delhi: This English summer will be remembered for its combative Test cricket, but also for Shubman Gill's emergence as Indian cricket's heir apparent. His first assignment as Test captain was trial by fire. A team in transition after three stalwarts had retired and the challenge of managing his best bowler's workload apart, the onus was also on bettering his own individual numbers. India's captain Shubman Gill acknowledges the crowd after India won the fifth Test match against England, at The Oval. (PTI) But Gill will return with great memories. He produced one of the great individual performances by a captain in Test history. His 754 runs in 10 innings, with four centuries, were more than just numbers. They were the backbone of India's resistance as he lived up to his philosophy for the team – 'never give up'. Only Don Bradman, with 810 runs in the 1936-37 Ashes, scored more in a Test series as captain. Among Indian skippers, Gill's tally is the highest, surpassing names like Virat Kohli and Sunil Gavaskar. 'There were certain things that I wanted to work on as a batsman and it was my goal to be able to be the best batter of the series,' Gill, the Player-of-the-Series, said at the post match presentation. 'To be able to accomplish that goal feels very satisfying and rewarding.' It wasn't only about the runs, but how they came. In the first Test at Leeds, under pressure after his underwhelming numbers in the format, Gill responded with a commanding century. Next up in Birmingham, his double hundred and hundred were the knockout punches in a seesaw Test. And when India were staring at defeat in Manchester, Gill again ground out a century that helped salvage the draw. 'Each hundred had a different significance,' Gill said in the media conference. 'Each has a story and means a lot to me – 25 days of cricket and we played them all, so it's hard to pick one.' Gill also became the first Indian captain to score four centuries in a Test series. And at 25 years and 330 days, he is the fourth youngest in Test history to win the Player-of-the-Series award on captaincy debut. As a leader, it is clear that he has a lot to learn, but in acknowledging that, he looked assured and willing to learn. When asked how he approached pressure situations, he said, 'It's moments like these where you feel like the journey is worth it. More highs and lows and that's kind of expected in sport, it is a roller-coaster. But that's how the game and life is. You have to be able to navigate the highs and lows and stay balanced.' Gill seemed confident as India returned to bowl on the final day of the hard-fought series, but he was quick to credit his bowlers for making his job easier. England needed only 35 runs with four wickets in hand – including the injured Chris Woakes – and the fast bowlers, Mohammed Siraj and Prasidh Krishna, responded with a performance for the ages. Siraj snapped up three wickets for nine runs on an overcast morning, looking like taking a wicket with every delivery bowled with the old ball. Gill said: 'Every ball, every spell that he bowled, he gave his all. Every captain, every team wants a player like him. We are very fortunate to have him in the team.' 'When you have good bowlers like Siraj and Prasidh bowling that spell, captaincy seems pretty easy. The ball is doing all sorts… they're making the ball talk. We just wanted to make sure (England) were feeling the pressure throughout. Pressure makes everyone do things they don't want to.' Gill's tone in post-match interviews has reflected the composure he had gained under pressure, something that seemed missing in the first half of the series. 'That we never give up,' he said when asked to describe his team's mentality. In an era when cricket debates often examine the commercial viability of reducing Tests to four-dayers, workload management and the future of the longest format, Gill has also emerged as its advocate, something that he vowed to carry forward after Kohli's retirement ahead of this series. 'If it were four-day Tests, all five games would have been draws,' he said with a laugh. 'Test cricket should be as it is. It's the most rewarding and satisfying format. You work the hardest to get a win. The best thing is that it always gives you a second chance, which no other format gives.' There were doubts raised when Gill was appointed captain with questions raised about his batting consistency and ability away from home. However, he has brilliantly regained his red-ball credentials, averaging 75.40 over the series – he averages 41.35 overall – with resolute knocks under pressure. There were moments when he didn't hesitate to take on the opposition, bringing forth a different aspect to his personality. This was some way to get started, indeed. But there will be tougher tests ahead, be it overseas tours, dressing room dynamics, lean patches or technical vulnerabilities. But for now, Gill has passed his first leadership exam in flying colours.


The Hindu
20 minutes ago
- The Hindu
Gill wants Test cricket to be as it is
As Shubman Gill's first assignment as India's Test captain turned out to be a memorable one as his team came from behind to draw the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, the skipper made it clear that there should not be any changes to the longest format of the game. 'I think Test cricket should be as it is. In my opinion, it is the most rewarding and satisfying format. You work the hardest to be able to get a win and the best thing about this format is that it always gives you a second chance, which none of the other formats give,' Gill said on Monday (August 4, 2025) after India won the fifth and final Test to level the series. 'So, if you keep working hard, if you keep doing the right things, there is always a second chance…' he said. After losing the opening fixture in Leeds, India won the second Test in Birmingham, before going down at Lord's in the third. However, a draw in Manchester meant the series wasn't over. And with a bunch of youngsters giving it their all, India created history at The Oval, beating England by six wickets. Before the series got under way, the right-hander said that he wouldn't let captaincy affect his batting. He kept his word with 754 runs in the series, including a double hundred and three hundreds. As a leader, he had to take care of the mental health of the players and that helped him. 'If you think too much about others, your own pressure goes away. You are always thinking about someone else. Even in captaincy or when I was batting, I felt that. Because, thinking about others, I didn't feel much pressure on myself,' he said. 'I was always thinking about what I can do for the team. How can I help a person who is feeling low? So all of these things helped me to be able to take pressure from myself…'