logo
England fail to make the most of the conditions after winning toss in decider

England fail to make the most of the conditions after winning toss in decider

Glasgow Times5 days ago
Without the injured Ben Stokes – captain and leading wicket-taker in the series – as well as the rested Jofra Archer and Brydon Carse, the hosts relied on a new-look lineup at the Kia Oval.
Gus Atkinson started well on his comeback from a hamstring problem, removing Yashasvi Jaiswal lbw in his second over with the new ball, and the ever-present Chris Woakes persuaded KL Rahul to drag down his stumps.
But, after Stokes' stand-in Ollie Pope continued England's 100 per cent record at the toss, the hosts did not make the most of the cloudy conditions and good carry.
Chris Woakes removed KL Rahul (Ben Whitley/PA)
Josh Tongue, who took 11 wickets in the first two games of the series, could not find his radar at all, conceding 11 runs in wides across five scattershot overs.
Jamie Overton, earning a second cap three years on from his debut, also struggled for rhythm and sent down some wayward balls that let the Indian batters off the hook.
The interval was taken eight minutes early as rain arrived, with Sai Sudharsan settling well on 25 not out and the prolific Shubman Gill unbeaten on 15.
Atkinson, who has not featured since the Zimbabwe Test in May, was the pick of the bowlers with a sharp and well-directed spell that saw him concede just seven runs in six overs. He also got the better of Jaiswal, nipping the ball back into his front and winning the decision after a DRS review.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Harris blasts Spirit home in Hundred curtain raiser to outfox Invincibles
Harris blasts Spirit home in Hundred curtain raiser to outfox Invincibles

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Harris blasts Spirit home in Hundred curtain raiser to outfox Invincibles

How do you follow that? Mohammed Siraj is still on the mind, bowling, always bowling, programmed to wobble it in at off‑stump until the collapse of civilisation. Anyone who witnessed Chris Woakes, scrapping for singles with his slinged‑up arm, merits a week off to head to the sauna, play the vinyls, whatever gets you to decompress. But this is the English cricketing summer, refusing to give you a minute, packed beyond comprehension. A day after the conclusion of the Test summer, it was time to start the Hundred north of the river with the capital double-header: London Spirit against Oval Invincibles. This is a stopgap season, the final year before new team owners – including four Indian Premier League franchises – enter with their own ideas of how to make this thing sing. For now, it is the same old tricks: fireworks in the daylight to kick off the new tournament and the awkwardness of the pop-up DJ booth, trying its best to convince those in: cricket is cool, cricket is cool, please kids believe me, cricket is cool. Away from the gimmicks, there is quality. The Spirit women are the defending champions, with their opponents two-time winners. It was only right that the first ball of the new edition was bowled by Marizanne Kapp, the South Africa all‑rounder who has excelled in every season, orchestrating their final victories on this ground. She bowled 10 on the trot and hooped the last of those into Georgia Redmayne to celebrate the first wicket. From there it was a game of Australian power. Grace Harris captained Surrey to victory in the Blast last month but is calling Lord's home at the moment. She was brutal against the leggies of Amanda‑Jade Wellington, her compatriot, smashing 89 off 42 balls as the Spirit finished on 176 for five, the second-highest total in the women's Hundred. Cordelia Griffith, whose previous four seasons in the competition had returned a high score of 30 not out, finally had the glory of a half-century. Then came the Invincibles' Meg Lanning, the former Australia captain playing against the side she represented last year. There was scratchiness in her start, 24 off her first 27 deliveries, costly in a chase requiring immediate impact. But then the strokes flowed. With 47 required off 14 balls, Lanning unleashed on Eva Gray, 20 taken off the next four deliveries, the cut shot a reminder of her days as a giant of the international game. A riveting finish was on until Issy Wong intervened, Lanning restricted to 85, the Spirit victors by 17 runs. During the break between games, members of the 'Tech Titans' consortium, the incoming co-owners of the Spirit, surveyed the view from the media centre, taking in what they have signed up for. The start by the women's side would have pleased them and there must have been some excitement when Spirit's men walked out to bat. Kane Williamson is their new captain, David Warner is present at the top of the order. The pair no longer reign over the IPL – they won it together at Sunrisers Hyderabad nine years ago – but the Hundred will take star names where it can. The runs, though, will have to wait another day. Both departed for single-figure scores against the Invincibles, who have won the past two men's competitions. In fact, the two‑figure score was a rarity as the Spirit crumbled, bowled out for just 80 as Rashid Khan and Sam Curran shared six wickets. The former's twirl is a new addition to the Invincibles, a significant flex to call upon the leading wicket-taker in T20 cricket as you chase three in a row. 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 lowly target meant there was little thrill under the lights, a thoroughly anti‑climactic conclusion awaiting all; the England and Wales Cricket Board announced an attendance of 26,013 for the men's game. The crowd's greatest pleasure came from witnessing a fox do a lap of the ground early in the chase. Liam Dawson finding some turn to bowl Tawanda Muyeye did not muster as much excitement. The Invincibles crawled on what was not the easiest surface, yet still got the win with a six down the ground, 31 balls left in the match. But, then again, how do you follow that?

Test Match Special coverage of dramatic England-India Test series achieves over 14.3 million digital requests to listen across BBC Sounds and BBC Sport
Test Match Special coverage of dramatic England-India Test series achieves over 14.3 million digital requests to listen across BBC Sounds and BBC Sport

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Test Match Special coverage of dramatic England-India Test series achieves over 14.3 million digital requests to listen across BBC Sounds and BBC Sport

The BBC's Test Match Special coverage of England's dramatic five-Test series against India generated over 14.3 million digital listening requests across the BBC. As the extraordinary fifth Test between England and India came to a dramatic close on Monday, BBC Radio 5 Sport Extra's Test Match Special (TMS) saw over half a million digital listener requests in just one nail-biting hour of play. Listeners enjoyed live commentary on the unfolding drama, as England's Chris Woakes came out to bat in a sling, having dislocated his shoulder on the opening day at The Oval. Throughout the fifth Test, there were an impressive 3.1 million digital requests to listen to TMS on BBC Sounds and BBC Sport. The series has been described as the 'best I have been involved in since the Ashes in 2005' by BBC Chief Cricket Commentator Jonathan Agnew. Ultimately it was India who won the fifth Test by just six runs to secure a 2-2 draw. As well as live radio - which kept pace with every twist and turn of the Test - listeners could also access popular podcasts for the duration of the series, including Test Match Special Podcast, Tailenders, and No Balls: The Cricket Podcast. Cricket coverage across the BBC continues with every match of The Hundred being broadcast live on the BBC this August – all 68 games across the men's and women's series – with extensive coverage on BBC Radio 5 Live and 5 Sports Extra. BBC 5 Sports Extra is the go-to destination for sports fans across the UK, recently launching an additional two new sports streams on BBC Sounds in May 2025. It's now easier than ever for listeners to discover and enjoy the full breadth of sports commentary available from across the BBC, taking the excitement with them, wherever they go. Heidi Dawson, Controller of BBC Radio 5 Live and 5 Sports Extra, says: 'The England–India series has been a shining example of how live radio sport delivers spine-tingling moments of sporting history. From ball-by-ball drama to expert analysis, we're delighted that so many listeners turned to Test Match Special on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra to follow every nerve-wracking moment of the series. Now, with The Hundred underway, we're excited to bring fans even more live action and insight through our unrivalled audio coverage and new sports streams.' PS

Pantomime villain Mohammed Siraj deserved last laugh against England
Pantomime villain Mohammed Siraj deserved last laugh against England

Telegraph

time7 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Pantomime villain Mohammed Siraj deserved last laugh against England

Test cricket is the cruellest sport: a game in which five days of toil, and 25 in a five-match series, can be decided by impossibly fine margins. But, just occasionally, Test matches get the denouement that they deserve. For Mohammed Siraj, justice came from the 1,113th ball that he bowled against England this series. With a pinpoint yorker, the fast bowler knocked out the base of Gus Atkinson's off stump. He wheeled away, spread his arms aloft in celebration before being engulfed by his team-mates. This pulsating series had the most-fitting ending: a six-run India victory, clinching a 2-2 draw. INDIA HAVE WON THE FIFTH TEST TO DRAW THE SERIES 2-2 😱 — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) August 4, 2025 If his captain, Shubman Gill, won India 's player of the series award, Siraj was scores ahead of anyone on either side as the most durable cricketer. A lethal cocktail of the intense schedule, flat pitches and an unusually unresponsive Dukes ball has made this series unforgiving for bowlers, stretching to every single allotted day. Jasprit Bumrah was only fit to play in three Tests, Ben Stokes in four. As Siraj charged in to deliver the final delivery of the series, the only other bowler to play in all five Tests, Chris Woakes, was at the non-striker's end, with his left arm in a sling. Siraj, cast as the pantomime villain for much of the series, outlasted them all. He had also willed himself to ignore what threatened to be his cruel fate this series: as least-deserving loser. On day four at the Oval, Siraj caught Harry Brook at fine leg, only for his right leg to clip the boundary edge. As Brook advanced from 19 to 111, Siraj received constant taunting from England's fans, reminding him of his drop. Harry Brook survives! 😱 Mohammed Siraj takes the catch but then stumbles over the boundary, it's a six! 😮 — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) August 3, 2025 As evident throughout his skirmishes with England's batsmen this series, Siraj's facial expressions do not suggest a natural poker player. His evident self-disgust after dropping Brook showed his fear that his error would determine the series result. Instead, he summoned all his desire to try and push the series towards a different denouement. Such desire is, perhaps, the abiding theme of Siraj's journey. The son of an auto-rickshaw driver, Siraj learnt the game playing in tennis-ball leagues in Hyderabad; the upbringing shaped his skinny style and full length. Siraj did not bowl with a hard ball until he was 20. A year later, he was representing his state. Siraj called upon this same desire in Australia in 2020, when selected for his first Test tour. During the grim years of the pandemic, Siraj's tour began with a 14-day quarantine period, able to leave their hotel rooms only for training. All of this, only to be a travelling reserve. Early in the tour, Siraj's father died. If he returned home to attend the funeral, he would not be able to return Down Under. But Siraj remembered his father's dream: to see him play Test cricket. The next day, he went to training again. 'Your father's dua [blessing] is with you,' Ravi Shastri, then India's head coach, told Siraj, as documented in the book The Miracle Makers. 'You'll end up with a five-wicket haul in this Test series.' After injuries granted Siraj his Test debut, Shastri's prediction came true in Brisbane. Siraj raised his hands aloft to salute his father. Never would his father have been prouder than at the Oval, as Siraj's sheer indestructibility led India to victory in one of the greatest Tests of the 21st century. Yet the adulation for Siraj's sheer zest for the fight, should not obscure his skill. Remarkable physical durability, allied to a spirit that refuses to be broken, can only take a fast bowler so far. Siraj's brilliance is to combine these with phenomenal skill: moving the ball both ways at speeds above 85mph, with an action that continually threatens the stumps. He has honed these qualities not just through his own relentless determination to improve, but also India's modern system: he played 16 first-class games for India A before his Test debut. Siraj is often lauded as Bumrah 's perfect foil. Yet his performances in this series have illustrated that he is not just a superb accompaniment for Bumrah, but also a worthy attack-leader in his place. Extraordinarily, India lost 2-0 in the Tests that Bumrah played, but won both games when he was rested. In the two Tests that Bumrah missed, at Edgbaston and the Oval, Siraj took 16 wickets. This continued a trend, of Siraj being better in Bumrah's absence. He now averages 35 in Tests alongside Bumrah, but just 25.1 when Bumrah is absent. After this pulsating hour at the Oval, Siraj is now the author of a moment that will continue to be replayed throughout India's Test history. Amid his euphoria Siraj rushed to claim a memento. Rarely has a stump been so well-deserved.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store