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Time of India
5 days ago
- Sport
- Time of India
IND vs ENG: As tensions grow at Lord's, Ravindra Jadeja and Brydon Carse locked in heated moment
The third Test match between India and England at Lord's has become increasingly intense, with both teams showing strong competitive spirit. The fifth day began with directing verbal comments at after dismissing him. and Harry Brook continued the verbal exchanges when Nitish Kumar Reddy arrived at the crease. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now A significant incident occurred just before lunch when and collided in the middle of the pitch. The collision took place during the final ball of the 35th over as Jadeja was running for a quick two. Both players were focused on the ball when they collided during Jadeja's first run. Carse responded with verbal comments toward the Indian all-rounder. Jadeja explained he was simply running between wickets. The situation escalated when Carse attempted to grab Jadeja, but Ben Stokes intervened to defuse the tension. The umpires stepped in to speak with both Stokes and Carse. Watch: The fifth day of the Test match presented a clear scenario for both teams. India needed 135 runs to win, while England required six wickets. England started strongly, dismissing Rishabh Pant, KL Rahul, and Washington Sundar in quick succession. Nitish Kumar Reddy and Ravindra Jadeja attempted to stabilise the innings. Their partnership was cut short just before lunch when Chris Woakes dismissed Reddy for 13 runs. Washington Sundar press conference: On Gautam Gambhir's support, last over drama, winning at Lord's The match had been evenly balanced in the first innings, with both teams scoring 387 runs. Washington Sundar took four wickets in the second innings, helping India bowl out England for 192. Despite defending a modest total of 192, England's bowlers managed to create a competitive situation in the match.


India Today
5 days ago
- Sport
- India Today
Wrestlemania at Lord's: Ravindra Jadeja, Brydon Carse engage in ugly spat mid-pitch
India all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja engaged in an ugly spat with Brydon Carse after a mid-pitch collision with the England seamer on Day 5 of the third Test at Lord's. India got off to the worst possible start on the last day of the match as they lost three quick wickets in the first session with Rishabh Pant, Washington Sundar and KL Rahul being dismissed the three quick dismissals, it was all on Jadeja and Nitish Kumar Reddy's shoulders to take India home as they were staring at another defeat. During their brief partnership, a heated moment was witnessed on the pitch as Jadeja and Carse collided mid-pitch. In the 37th over of the innings, Jadeja played Carse towards third man and looked for a vs IND 3rd Test day 5 Updates However, with both the England seamer and India batter looking at the ball, they collided mid-pitch. The incident left Carse annoyed who said a few words to Jadeja while the India batter also charged and replied in the same tone until they were separated by Ben the incident here:Lafda between Jadeja and English cricketer ( Brydon Carse ) (@MasaledarGuy) July 14, 2025Earlier, Archer dismantled Rishabh Pant's stumps to get England off to a terrific start, giving India a major blow early in the day. As Pant walked back to the pavilion, Archer was also seen giving a send-off to the India batter as he said a few words in further dismissed Washington Sundar for a duck, taking an excellent diving catch to his right. The speedster was at it again, giving another fiery send-off to Sundar, bringing England in complete command of the Stokes also got the prized scalp of KL Rahul. He got dismissed for 39 as Stokes brought one sharply back into him, which crashed into his pads. As a result, India were left reeling at 82/7 needing another 111 runs to win. To make matters worse, Chris Woakes dismissed Nitish Kumar Reddy caught behind on the stroke of lunch to pile on the misery for India.- EndsMust Watch


Qatar Tribune
6 days ago
- Sport
- Qatar Tribune
Carse keeps England alive as India chase 193 to win at Lord's
Agencies London A stunning late burst from Brydon Carse kept England alive on an utterly captivating fourth day of the third Test against India at Lord's on Sunday, reports Bowling with supreme rhythm from the Pavilion End, Carse pinned both Karun Nair and India captain Shubman Gill leg before. With the final ball of the day, Ben Stokes bowled nightwatchman Akash Deep to leave India 58-4, 135 adrift of their target of 193. It was a dramatic end to a wonderful Sunday, one played on a surface that suddenly became venomous. India's bowlers were brilliant to dismiss England for 192. Jasprit Bumrah somehow only claimed two wickets, the main damage done by off-spinner Washington Sundar's 4-22. England lost their last six wickets for 38 runs. In a chaotic morning, Harry Brook was bowled trying to sweep seamer Akash Deep for 23. Joe Root dropped anchor for 40, Stokes even more guarded for 33. Both the captain past and present were bowled by Sundar, part of a total of 12 home batters that have lost their furniture - an England record for a Test in this country. Jofra Archer bounced out Yashasvi Jaiswal for nought, but Chris Woakes could not cling on to a return catch off KL Rahul when he had only five. England were drifting out of the game until Carse's intervention, before the talismanic Stokes had the final say. It will be a grandstand finale on Monday morning. Off-spinner Shoaib Bashir, who damaged his finger on day three, is available to bowl for England if required, though looks set to be ruled out of the final two Tests. England owe much to Carse after their batting buckled. No doubt run-scoring was tough, though the home side did not help themselves with their decision making. Whether it was the toughness of the conditions, or the feeling between the teams, England got carried away in the morning session. Ben Duckett played a needless swipe and Crawley, who bravely fended off Bumrah, fell with a familiar loose drive. Most infuriating was Brook. Twice he ramped Deep for four, then hit the same bowler for a straight six. Next over, Deep moved a fielder fine on the leg side, so Brook attempted a sweep and was bowled. England might feel aggrieved that India used substitute keeper Dhruv Jurel, who was excellent standing up to the seamers. Still, standing back he conceded the majority of his 25 byes, without which the game might already be as good as gone. Root threatened one of his epics to dig England out of trouble, Stokes never got to the stage where he flicked his trademark switch. The wickets fell in a cluster of four, then six, either side of their stand of 67. Archer needed only one ball at Jaiswal to bounce him out and the true cost of Woakes' drop of Rahul is still to be revealed. Carse, though, was irresistible. India have been the better team across this series, now they have the chance to lead it and grab a slice of history - only once before at this ground has a side conceded so many runs fielding first and gone on to win, an Australia side containing Don Bradman in 1930. The tourists' main area of supremacy has been their bowling and they were collectively outstanding on Sunday. Right from the beginning, with Bumrah creating havoc from the Nursery End, England were given no respite. Getting peppered by Bumrah, England tried to get after Mohammed Siraj, still fired up from the third evening. When Duckett hacked to mid-on, the two players brushed shoulders, then Ollie Pope was lbw on review. Just like the first innings, Nitish Kumar Reddy found movement down the slope, and suckered in Crawley. Deep was targeted by Brook, but held his line to uproot middle stump when Brook aimed the needless sweep. Scores: India 387 & 58 for 4 (Rahul 33*, Carse 2-11) need 135 runs to beat England 387 & 192 (Root 40, Washington 4-22, Siraj 2-31, Bumrah 2-38).


United News of India
12-07-2025
- Sport
- United News of India
Rahul hits gritty fifty, India reach 145/3 at stumps
London, July 11 (UNI) Jasprit Bumrah's maiden five-wicket haul at Lord's and a composed half-century from KL Rahul headlined a gripping second day of the third Test as India reached 145 for 3 at stumps in reply to England's 387. Rishabh Pant added flair late in the day with a string of boundaries as India closed 242 runs behind. The day began with England resuming at 251/4. Brydon Carse frustrated the Indian bowlers with a gritty 56, capitalising on two dropped chances. He reached his maiden Test fifty with a towering six off Mohammed Siraj before the Indian pacers wrapped things up. Bumrah cleaned up Jofra Archer with a trademark inswinger to complete a memorable five-for (5/74), earning a spot on the Lord's Honours Board. Siraj (3/83) dismissed Carse with a sharp yorker to end the innings. India's reply got off to a cautious start. Yashasvi Jaiswal was dismissed early for 13, caught in the slips. KL Rahul and Karun Nair then stitched together a gritty 50-run partnership. Nair looked fluent, driving Carse and Chris Woakes with elegance and authority. He struck boundaries through cover and point, including a stylish four in the 15th over off Carse. However, Nair's promising knock of 40 came to an end when Ben Stokes induced a thick edge, brilliantly taken low by Joe Root diving to his left. The catch, Root's 211th in Tests, saw him surpass Rahul Dravid's record for most Test catches by an Indian. Rahul, meanwhile, played a mature innings, navigating the early movement and accelerating post tea. He brought up his 50 off 97 balls with a single off Shoaib Bashir in the 39th over. His knock included classy boundaries—an elegant extra-cover drive off Ben Stokes, a ramp over slips off Woakes, and flicks through mid-wicket and fine leg. He remained unbeaten on 53 at close. Shubman Gill struggled for fluency and eventually edged Woakes to debutant keeper Jamie Smith for 16. The tactic of keeping the wicketkeeper up to the stumps paid off as Gill, cramped for space, was forced into the mistake. Pant, walking in at No. 5, wasted no time. He danced into his innings with trademark aggression, slamming Bashir for three boundaries in quick succession: a sweep, a back-foot cut, and a forceful slog over mid-wicket. He ended the day on 19* off 33 balls. India survived a couple of reviews during the innings—Nair successfully overturned a leg-side caught-behind decision and Rahul was correctly given not out on an LBW call after England's appeal was struck down. With Rahul anchoring and Pant looking dangerous, India will look to consolidate on Day 3 and reduce the deficit further on what is still a responsive Lord's pitch. Brief score: At stumps, Day 2: England 387 all out (Joe Root 104, Brydon Carse 56; Jasprit Bumrah 5/74, Mohammed Siraj 2/85); India 145/3 in 43.0 overs (KL Rahul 53*, Rishabh Pant 19*, Karun Nair 40) UNI BDN ARN


Express Tribune
12-07-2025
- Sport
- Express Tribune
Bumrah strikes for India as Eng post 387 in Test
India's Jasprit Bumrah (2R) celebrates with teammates after clean bowling England's Joe Root on the second day of the third cricket Test match at Lord's on Friday. PHOTO: AFP Jasprit Bumrah marked his India return by gaining a coveted place on the Lord's honours boards with a five-wicket haul before England paceman Brydon Carse's maiden Test fifty frustrated the tourists. Bumrah, the world's top-ranked Test bowler, took 5-74 in 27 overs as England were dismissed for 387 in their first innings after lunch on Friday's second day of the third Test. Bumrah's haul included a brilliant burst Friday of three for one in seven balls that reduced England, who resumed on 251-4, to 271-7, with the fast bowler dismissing captain Ben Stokes, century-maker Joe Root and Chris Woakes. But tailender Carse frustrated India with 56 after he shared a valuable eighth-wicket stand of 84 with Jamie Smith. England wicketkeeper Smith made India pay for dropping him on five with an innings of 51. That followed his impressive scores of 184 not out and 88 during India's crushing 336-run win in the second Test at Edgbaston last week. That victory meant India levelled this five-match series at 1-1 despite resting Bumrah in Birmingham. Initial interest Friday focused on whether Root, 99 not out overnight, would go on to make a hundred. In all 17 previous instances in Test cricket, batsmen who were 99 not out overnight completed their centuries the following morning. Root maintained the sequence off Friday's first ball, pushing a wide Bumrah delivery past gully for four. That fortunate boundary completed Root's 37th Test century, fifth on an all-time list headed by India's Sachin Tendulkar with 51 hundreds. Stokes, fit following a groin injury that hampered him on Thursday, had added just five runs to his overnight 39 when he was bowled by a Bumrah delivery that jagged back and smashed into off stump. Next ball, Woakes fell for a golden duck as he got a thin edge to reserve wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel, still deputising after Rishabh Pant suffered a finger injury on Thursday. Carse survived the hat-trick delivery but England were still struggling at 271-7. Their position would have been even worse had KL Rahul not dropped a relatively straightforward slip chance when Smith had made just five, with Mohammed Siraj the unlucky bowler. Smith went onto complete a 52-ball fifty including a whipped four through midwicket off Bumrah, with Carse also flaying the paceman through the covers. However, Smith was out shortly after lunch when he was caught behind off the persevering Siraj. Bumrah then bowled Jofra Archer, playing his first Test after more than four years of injury exile, to complete his five-wicket haul. Carse was dropped on 45 when Akash Deep failed to hold a tough chance running back towards deep midwicket. But the unconcerned Carse went to fifty in style when he launched a Siraj slower delivery for a superb straight six to reach the landmark in 77 balls. South African-born Carse was dropped again before he was last man out hitting across the line against a yorker from Siraj, who finished with 2-85 in 23.3 overs.