
Injured Nitish Reddy, Arshdeep Singh ruled out of 4th Test against England
The list of injuries has come as an additional concern over the team's issues related to workload management. Star pacer Jasprit Bumrah has already played 2 out of the promised three Test matches, while Mohammed Siraj is also on the brink of burnout, considering his non-stop workload in red-ball matches since 2024.India's Existing InjuriesIndia were suffering from an injury crisis since the last Test match at Lord's. Rishabh Pant copped a blow on his left finger on Day 1 of the Test match and has not been able to keep wickets since. If India's drills are of any indication, then it is likely that Dhruv Jurel will don the wicketkeeper's gloves in Manchester, with Rishabh Pant playing as a full-time batter.That change will make India's bowling short, and given the unavailability of Nitish Reddy, it will cause India massive headaches.India Today also learnt that the team has already drafted in Anshul Kamboj in the squad. However, an official announcement has not been made. Kamboj impressed in the A games with his impeccable line and length, but was sent back to India, due to the presence of Harshit Rana as the injury cover in the Indian team at the time.advertisementIn case Akash Deep is not able to play the Test match, here's how the Indian line-up might look like on Wednesday, July 23.KL Rahul, Yashaavi Jaiswal, Karun Nair/Sai Sudharsan, Shubman Gill, Rishabh Pant, Dhruv Jurel (wk), Kuldeep Yadav/Washington Sundar, Ravindra Jadeja, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Siraj, Prasidh Krishna/Shardul Thakur.India's updated squad for England tour:Shubman Gill (captain), Rishabh Pant (wk) (vice-captain), Yashasvi Jaiswal, KL Rahul, Sai Sudharsan, Abhimanyu Easwaran, Karun Nair, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Ravindra Jadeja, Dhruv Jurel (wk), Washington Sundar, Shardul Thakur, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Siraj, Prasidh Krishna, Akash Deep, Arshdeep Singh, Anshul Kamboj, Kuldeep Yadav.- EndsTune InMust Watch

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United News of India
28 minutes ago
- United News of India
Joe Root's masterclass put England in command
Manchester, July 25 (UNI) Joe Root led England's charge with a majestic 150 as the hosts closed Day 3 at a dominant 544 for 7 in 135 overs, taking a commanding 186-run lead over India's first-innings 358 in the ongoing Test at Old Trafford today. Resuming the day at 225 for 2, Root and Ollie Pope (71) steadily built England's innings, frustrating the Indian bowlers with measured resistance. The duo's 113-run partnership set the tone, as Root calmly moved to his 38th Test century with a gentle glance to the fine leg boundary off debutant Anshul Kamboj. It was a knock that combined patience and panache, highlighted by reverse sweeps, late cuts, and elegant drives. Root brought up his 150 in 248 deliveries (14x4), drawing a loud cheer from the spectators. But his splendid innings ended at 150 when Ravindra Jadeja produced a sharply turning delivery that beat the bat and saw him stumped by substitute keeper Dhruv Jurel. Captain Ben Stokes was equally impactful. After his five-wicket haul earlier in the match, he brought up his 36th Test 50, showcasing his all-round dominance. Stokes muscled boundaries through pulls and reverse sweeps and took charge against both pace and spin. He eventually retired hurt on 66 at 491/4 but returned later in the day and remained unbeaten on 77 by stumps. Jamie Smith's brief cameo of 9 ended when Jasprit Bumrah finally found reward for his effort, getting Smith caught behind off a delivery that straightened and induced an edge. Jurel, again impressive behind the stumps, took a sharp low catch diving forward. Liam Dawson added late momentum with aggressive stroke play, including a pair of well-timed boundaries, one via a pull off Bumrah and another thumped straight down the ground off Washington Sundar. However, wickets began to fall as India finally saw some return for their toil. Chris Woakes became Siraj's first scalp of the innings when a low ball sneaked under the bat to hit the stumps, a just reward for the pacer who had bowled without luck all day. Earlier, India had lost a review against Root in the morning and missed a runout opportunity, which proved costly as Root built his imposing innings. England's innings was peppered with quality strokes and decisive running between the wickets. Despite occasional breakthroughs, India's bowlers lacked sustained pressure, and their inconsistent lengths allowed England batsmen to settle in. The second new ball taken at 90.3 overs did little to trouble Root and Stokes during their partnership. With England sitting comfortably at 544 for 7 and still having batting left, India faces an uphill task heading into Day 4. England: 544/7 in 135.0 overs (Joe Root 150, Ben Stokes 77*, Ollie Pope 71; Sundar 2/57 Jadeja 2/117); India 1st Innings: 358 UNI BDN SS


Deccan Herald
31 minutes ago
- Deccan Herald
Anshul Kamboj struggles as selection backfires
The 24-year-old, who bagged five wickets in total in the two India A games prior to the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, was added to the squad suddenly on Sunday after key pacer Akash Deep was hit by a groin injury and Arshdeep Singh cut his bowling hand during a training session last week.


Indian Express
31 minutes ago
- Indian Express
No help from other end for Jasprit Bumrah… they are little bit greedy: Morne Morkel
The one big reason for India trailing in the fourth Test at Old Trafford is Jasprit Bumrah's failure to take wickets with the new ball, a trend that started in the last Test he played at Birmingham. The blazing start of English openers Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley — scoring 166 runs in 32 overs — pushed England ahead in this decisive Test. According to the Indian bowling coach Morne Morkel, it is the lack of support from the other end that is making it difficult for the team's pace spearhead to get the better of England's top order batsmen. 'For him to be successful, we need to build partnerships. The other guys need to help him out and I think at times, the guys are also trying from the other end, they are a little bit greedy — trying to strive too much and that's how we leak and sort of release that pressure. You can't say anything about Bumrah, he's number one in the world, he's skillful. At times you need help from the other end,' Morkel said. When talking about Day 2 when the game truly slipped out of India's hands because of the worst-bowling day of the tour, Morkel again spoke about leaking runs and bowlers being greedy. He was answering a question about debutant Anshul Kamboj being preferred over Mohammed Siraj with the new ball. 'See if we attack first with Bumrah ad and Siraj up front, then we have to go to less experienced guys at first change. So that is a bit of a tricky one, but looking back at yesterday, you back a guy that's picked on his strength — which being Anshul bowls with the new ball with the best bowler in the world. Siraj has been doing a fantastic job bowling first change. Yesterday our execution let us down, so I think it's not so much to blame on the combinations we went with, it's more the fact that we let ourselves down with our execution. I haven't seen a pitch map where we basically leaked runs, I think 100 runs on both sides, normally like a bit of a split. For me yesterday was either a sign that we were too greedy but we couldn't stick to the plan and then from there we found ourselves chasing the game a little bit.' On the question of Bumrah's workload he said, 'You know, he's the strike bowler, there will be moments that you need to push a guy a little bit harder and longer to get the breakthrough. England has a powerful batting line-up. As a batter, your initial first 20 balls are very crucial and in terms of a guy who can ask questions, he is Bumrah. He is going to be asked a lot of times to come in and do the job for us.'