logo
Injured captain Stokes ruled out of 5th Test, England make 4 changes

Injured captain Stokes ruled out of 5th Test, England make 4 changes

Gulf Today4 days ago
England captain Ben Stokes has been ruled out of the fifth and final test against India with a right shoulder injury.
Ollie Pope, who bats at No. 3, will replace Stokes as captain for the test at the Oval in London, the England and Wales Cricket Board said on Wednesday.
Play begins Thursday, with India trailing 2-1 in the series and needing a win to draw.
Stokes said he expects to be sidelined for up to seven weeks, which should in no way impact his participation in this winter's Ashes series in Australia. But he felt it was clearly too risky playing one more test against India.
'It is one of those of weighing up the risk-reward, and the risk was way too high for damaging this any further than it currently is,' he said. 'I wouldn't expect to put any of my players at risk with an injury like this. Once this series is done, I was feet up anyway (so) it doesn't really make too much difference to what I've got from the end of the series up until the winter.'
The first test against Australia is on Nov. 21 and England will be counting on Stokes to help wrestle back the urn from Australia, which has held it since 2018. England has not won the Ashes since 2015 and has not won the Ashes in Australia since 2011.
The 34-year-old Stokes was back to his inspirational best as an allrounder in last week's drawn fourth test, taking five wickets against India with some brilliant hostile and accurate spells, and finding his batting form again with an authoritative knock of 141 for his long-awaited 14th test century.
He became England's fourth player to get five wickets and a century in a test. Stokes is the leading wicket taker across both teams with 17 - three more than Indian pacers Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj, with a lower average than both.
But bowling long spells clearly took its toll on Stokes, who has struggled with injuries in recent years. He was hit by a bout of cramp on day 3.
The intensity of the series so far has led to fatigue and injuries on both sides.
India's batting star Rishabh Pant has been ruled out of the fifth test with a foot fracture. He made 54 in the fourth test, despite playing with the injury.
England will also be without pacers Jofra Archer - who only recently returned to test cricket after more than four years out - and Brydon Carse. Spinner Liam Dawson is also left out in one of four changes.
Jacob Bethell replaces Stokes at No. 6 in the batting line up, while Gus Atkinson returns to bolster England's attack, along with Jamie Overton and Josh Tongue.
The 21-year-old Bethell has been regarded as one of the brightest talents in English cricket for many years, with a batting average of 52 from this three tests so far and a high score of 96. He is also a useful left-arm spinner.
The fourth test ended with tensions between the teams, with Stokes saying his opposite number Shubman Gill should have accepted his offer of a draw with the match heading toward an inevitable stalemate.
But Gill chose to wait until Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar - whose watchful and stubborn long partnership helped save the test - had completed their centuries.
On Tuesday, India head coach Gautam Gambhir clashed with ground staff at the Oval. Video footage showed Gambhir in a confrontation with Lee Fortis, the lead curator at the ground.
Stokes is preparing himself for an 'emotional' tribute to Graham Thorpe when the late former England batsman is honoured during this week's fifth and deciding Test against India at the Oval.
Thorpe took his own life on Aug.4, 2024, having batted depression and anxiety for several years, with police confirming he had died following an incident on a railway line near his home.
The left-handed batsman, who spent his entire professional career in south London with Oval-based Surrey, scored 6,744 Test runs at an average of 44.66 in 100 matches from 1993 to 2005.
He later held various coaching positions, including a role as England's batting chief, where he worked with current players such as Test captain Stokes and Joe Root.
A Day for Thorpey will be held on Friday, August 1 in support of mental health charity Mind on what would have been his 56th birthday.
'Thorpey's been a very influential character as a player and a coach in English cricket,' Stokes told reporters at the Oval on Wednesday.
Agencies
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oval downpour leaves England-India series on knife edge
Oval downpour leaves England-India series on knife edge

Khaleej Times

timean hour ago

  • Khaleej Times

Oval downpour leaves England-India series on knife edge

Harry Brook and Joe Root both hit hundreds before England's series finale against India was left on a knife edge after an Oval downpour cut short Sunday's fourth day. England were 339-6 when play was abandoned at 1703 GMT, with the hosts now needing a further 35 runs to reach a target of 374 on Monday's final day. India, meanwhile, require four wickets to end the five-match series level at 2-2. England were faltering at 106-3 following the loss of stand-in captain Ollie Pope. But the Yorkshire duo of Brook (111) and Root (105) turned the tide with a fourth-wicket stand of 195 that left England cruising to a 3-1 series win with more than a day to spare. But Brook's exit sparked a mini-collapse that saw England lose three wickets for 36 runs, with Root also unable to finish the job. And when bad light halted play at 1630 GMT, England were 339-6, with Jamie Smith (two not out) and Jamie Overton (nought not out) on their Surrey home ground. A huge downpour then effectively prevented any hope of a resumption Sunday. The most any side have made in the fourth innings to win a Test at the Oval is England's 263 in a one-wicket victory over Australia back in 1902. But aggressive batting has been a cornerstone of England's approach to Test cricket since captain Ben Stokes, ruled out of this match with a shoulder injury, and coach Brendon McCullum joined forces in 2022. England started this series with the 10th highest successful run chase in Test history after they knocked off a target of 371 for a five-wicket win over India in the opener at Headingley in June. Brook made an immediate impact when he came out to bat on Sunday, at one stage hitting 27 runs in the space of eight balls. The talented 26-year-old charged down the pitch to loft Akash Deep for an extraordinary six over cover despite heavy cloud cover in London favouring India's quicks. He almost holed out to fine leg off Prasidh Krishna but Mohammed Siraj was unable to stop himself stepping onto the boundary rope, which meant a six for Brook. India captain Shubman Gill let the game drift and it was not until the 43rd over, with England 190-3, that he introduced spin -- in the shape of Washington Sundar. But neither off-spinner Sundar or left-armer Ravindra Jadeja made much impact against two well-set batsmen, who took just 108 balls to complete a century partnership. Brook went to 98 when Deep misfielded a drive on the rope to concede a boundary. Next ball a two to third man took Brook to a 91-ball century, including 12 fours and two sixes, his second of the series. Brook's innings ended in appropriately spectacular fashion when, going for another big hit off Deep, his bat flew out of his hands. As the blade soared towards square leg, the ball looped to mid-off where Siraj held the catch. Root's typically elegant straight-driven four off Siraj took him to 98 not out at tea, with the former England captain completing his 39th Test century following the interval, reaching the landmark in just 137 balls, including 12 fours. Root, however, fell soon afterwards, when caught behind flicking at a Krishna delivery to leave England 337-6. England resumed Sunday on 50-1 after Siraj yorked Zak Crawley with the last ball of Saturday's play. Ben Duckett, 34 not out overnight, fell for 54 after edging an intended drive off Krishna to KL Rahul at second slip before Pope was plumb lbw for 27 to Siraj.

Siraj strikes after Jaiswal helps India set England daunting target
Siraj strikes after Jaiswal helps India set England daunting target

Gulf Today

timea day ago

  • Gulf Today

Siraj strikes after Jaiswal helps India set England daunting target

Yashasvi Jaiswal made a sparkling hundred and Washington Sundar a blistering fifty before Mohammed Siraj struck with the last ball of Saturday's play to bolster India's hopes of a series-levelling win in the fifth and deciding Test against England at the Oval. India were dismissed for 396 in their second innings on the third day as they set England a target of 374 to win with just over two days' play remaining. Siraj, ever-present in all five matches of a gruelling series, then yorked Zak Crawley for 14 with just two balls left in the day's play to spark joyous celebrations among the tourists. England were 50-1 at stumps, still requiring a further 324 runs to win, with Ben Duckett 34 not out. No side have made more to win in the fourth innings of a Test at the Oval than England's 263 in a one-wicket victory over Australia back in 1902. However, the most England have made to win any Test in the fourth innings was their 378 against India at Edgbaston in 2022, while they also chased down 371 at Headingley in the opening match of this series. Earlier, Jaiswal was out for 118, his second hundred of the series after the talented left-hander's ton at Headingley. The 23-year-old opener received superb support from Akash Deep in a third-wicket partnership of 107, the paceman belying his status as a nightwatchman with an accomplished 66 -- his maiden Test fifty. Ravindra Jadeja and Sundar, both fresh from hundreds in Manchester, each made 53, with Sundar launching a brutal assault after a depleted England took the new ball. A wayward home team, a bowler down after Chris Woakes suffered a shoulder injury diving in the field on Thursday, harmed their own cause by dropping six catches in the innings, with Jaiswal reprieved three times. India resumed Saturday on 75-2. Deep had made 21 when he edged Josh Tongue only for Crawley, diving across to his left from third slip, to floor the two-handed catch. Deep went to fifty when he pulled Gus Atkinson for his ninth four. But with India on the verge of batting through the morning session without losing a wicket, Deep got a leading edge to backward point off Jamie Overton. Shubman Gill, who has enjoyed a remarkable first series as India captain, fell to the very first ball after lunch when lbw to Gus Atkinson for 11. His exit left Gill just 20 runs adrift of Sunil Gavaskar's longstanding record for the most runs by an Indian cricketer in a Test series of 774, set against the West Indies in 1971. Gill compiled 754 runs at a superb average of 75, including four hundreds. Jaiswal's quick single off Atkinson saw the elated batsman to a 127-ball century, including 12 fours and two sixes. England dropped a sixth catch when, having set a trap to have Jaiswal taken at leg gully, the batsman duly obliged, only for Duckett to put him down off Overton. Jaiswal was eventually dismissed when he ramped Tongue straight to deep backward point before Jadeja completed his fifth fifty of the series in 71 balls. England took the new ball as soon as possible, with India 342-7 off 80 overs and promptly tried to bounce out Sundar in what proved to be an expensive ploy. The left-hander responded with three superb sixes, including hoisting Tongue, who finished with figures of 5-125, over fine leg and deep midwicket in the space of three balls. Agencies Scoreboard: India 1st Innings 224 England 1st Innings 247 India 2nd Innings (overnight: 75-2) Y Jaiswal c Overton b Tongue118 A Deep c Atkinson b Overton66 S Gill lbw b Atkinson11 K Nair c Smith b Atkinson17 R Jadeja c Brook b Tongue53 D Jurel lbw b Overton34 W Sundar c Crawley b Tongue53 M Siraj lbw b Tongue0 P Krishna not out0 Extras (b13, lb5, nb2, w6)26 Total (all out, 88 overs, 416 mins)396 Bowling: Atkinson 27-3-127-3 (2nb); Tongue 30-4-125-5 (3w); Overton 22-2-98-2 (2w); Bethell 4-0-13-0; Root 5-1-15-0 England 2nd Innings (target: 374) Z Crawley b Siraj14 B Duckett not out34 Extras (lb1, nb1) 2 Total (1 wkt, 13.4 overs, 69 mins)50 Bowling: Deep 5-1-15-0 (1nb); Krishna 5-1-23-0; Siraj 3.5-0-11-1

India batters set stage for epic series finish on Day 3  ICC World Test Championship
India batters set stage for epic series finish on Day 3  ICC World Test Championship

Int'l Cricket Council

timea day ago

  • Int'l Cricket Council

India batters set stage for epic series finish on Day 3 ICC World Test Championship

A dominant Day 3 for India saw their batters set up a strong target for England before Mohammed Siraj dismissed Zak Crawley off the final ball, capping off a near-perfect outing for the visitors in the final Test at The Oval. With all results still on the table, the series is set for a thrilling finale on Day 4. India began Day 3 aiming to extend their overnight 52-run lead, with Yashasvi Jaiswal well set at the crease and Akash Deep accompanying him as the nightwatchman. Surprisingly, it was Akash Deep who took the initiative, as he smashed his highest score of 66 and shared a 107-run stand with Jaiswal – the biggest partnership of the match so far. England went into lunch firmly on the back foot, but they regrouped well in the second session, with their pacers attacking with renewed vigour. Gus Atkinson set the tone right after the break, striking with the very first ball by trapping Indian skipper Shubman Gill leg before wicket. Atkinson, who already snared a five-for in the first innings, continued his rampage, forcing Karun Nair into an uncomfortable position. The extra bounce took the edge of Nair's bat, with Jamie Smith taking a sharp catch behind the stumps. Yashasvi Jaiswal then made England pay for their missed chances, bringing up his sixth Test century in emphatic fashion. However, Josh Tongue eventually managed to dismiss the in-form opener, forcing him into a ramp shot that didn't get the desired elevation and landed straight in the hands of Jamie Overton deep on the boundary. Ravindra Jadeja and Dhruv Jurel then steadied the innings, holding firm until tea as India extended their lead to 281 runs. India's lead past the 300-run mark before Overton ended the partnership with a beautiful outswinger that trapped Jurel in front. Jadeja brought up his half-century shortly after but was soon caught at second slip off the bowling of Tongue. The pacer then struck again, dismissing Mohammed Siraj to leave India nine down. With just one wicket remaining, Washington Sundar shifted gears and brought up a quickfire half-century, smashing four sixes and two fours en route to propel India's lead to a commanding 374. Tongue completed his five-wicket haul with the dismissal of Sundar and took him to 19 wickets for the series, the highest for the hosts. Ben Duckett and Zak Crawley powered through India's charge in the final hour of play, adding another solid 50-run partnership. However, on the last ball of the day, Mohammed Siraj delivered a brilliant yorker to bowl over Crawley, giving India a crucial breakthrough and a huge lift heading into Day 4.

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