5th Test ENG vs IND ICC Match
ENg vs
Ind match
England Beat The India
In
5thTest Match
England won by 118 runs
Test 5 of 5 (ENG wins 4-1)
England - 332 & 423/8d
India - 292 & 345
v England post 423/8 declared, set
India 464 to win
v Rahul (149) and Pant (114) offer
India hope before Rashid strikes twice
v Rahul falls to phenomenal
spinning Rashid delivery
v Anderson takes decisive wicket as
England win by 118 runs
England
were the victors in the fifth and final Test against India. But they were made
to work far harder than anyone expected.
For
a time, they might even have been fearing a shock defeat at the hands of two
talented young Indian batsmen who played the knocks of their lives, KL Rahul
and Rishabh Pant.
For the final time in an England shirt, Cook
leaves the field For the final time in an England shirt, Cook leaves the field
First
Rahul. There was a hint last night of how he’d approach his innings. He’s had a
tough tour, with his technique looking up to the task but him still struggling
to make any kind of contribution, and with the series gone, and seemingly the
match too, he took the opportunity to try and hit his way back into form. It
came off in some style.
The
passage in which he brought up his hundred summed up the knock. In nine balls
he scored 20 runs, the highlight a flat-bat over extra cover for six, and he
had 101 of India’s 152/5.
He
had been well supported for a time by Ajinkya Rahane, who has looked near his
unruffled best at the back-end of this series. The pair added 118 after India
had been 2/3, before Rahane toe-ended a sweep shot into Keaton Jennings’ hands
at midwicket. Then Hanuma Vihari fell to a vicious Ben Stokes bouncer, copping
a duck to go with his first-innings fifty.
And
thereafter it was the Rishabh Pant show. His Test career began with a six. It
was only fitting he’d bring up his maiden ton with one too, and in between
there were all the fireworks which have helped make his name in the IPL.
It
took something special to separate them, an Adil Rashid legbreak ripping from
the rough past the outside edge of KL Rahul, choosing a little injudiciously to
try and nudge a single to bring up 150. Pant was even more injudicious, feeling
he was running out of partners even though he had first innings hero Ravindra
Jadeja for company, and he holed out into the deep.
That
was the end of India’s resistance, but not of the drama. Ishant Sharma and
Jadeja both nicked off to Sam Curran to leave India nine down, and having taken
the first two wickets of the chase on the fourth evening, it seemed James
Anderson might end the game still level with Glenn McGrath as Test cricket’s
leading wicket taker among fast bowlers.
Anderson and Cook embrace after the former
claims the final wicket Anderson and Cook embrace after the former claims the
final wicket
But
if ever a Test has been scripted, it’s been this one, and after Alastair Cook’s
glorious sign-off hundred, there was one more fairytale finish in store, and
Anderson duly pegged back Mohammed Shami’s middle stump.
There
were tears to follow, not of joy at breaking the record, but in seeing his
“best mate” Cook depart. He can at least take heart in the fact that there
can’t have been a more perfect end to a career, and that they have taken part
in a series for the ages, one which Test cricket needed, and one which received
the finish it deserved thanks to two upstarts who will surely entertain in the
longest format for years to come.
Post a Comment