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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Tim de Lisle (now) and James Wallace (earlier)

England v India: fifth Test, day four – as it happened

Jonny Bairstow and Joe Root leave the field, undefeated.
Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow leave the field, undefeated. Photograph: James Marsh/REX/Shutterstock

A sad note to report on.

Updated

Liew on Kohli.

Alex Lees is finding his feet at Test level.

Ali Martin's match report

See you back here tomorrow morning.

Time to catch up on a few emails. “As a Yorkshireman out in Geneva at a work meeting,” says John Butler, “this game is seriously messing with me. I keep having to go to the toilet or tutting and saying ‘my boss won’t leave me alone’ as I check OBO (no one here cares about cricket shamefully).”

“If this England side continue creating these exciting, total-threatening, fourth-innings run chases,” says Henry O’Brien, “there won’t be many teams declaring against them!”

“Watching Joe Root bat – encapsulated by that sumptuous cover drive,” says Colum Fordham, “is a joy to behold and makes you quite forget the need for emphasis on B…B…. (surely Bairstow Ball now - YJB is pretty easy on the eye too).” Yes, Bairstow should get more credit for it.

“It really feels like this partnership – and it really has to be these two (with a bit of Stokes if strictly necessary) - is taking England into the realms of distinct possibility. Or am I just tempting fate?”

No, distinct possibility is a good way of putting it. WinViz rates England’s chances at 76pc, to India’s 23, but as Nasser Hussain pointed out just now, England often start the day by losing an early wicket. And when that happens, it’s game on again, because Ben Stokes is the only recognised batter to come. This one, I can exclusively reveal, could go either way. A series that began last August is still in the balance.

Thanks for your company and do join the OBO from 10.30am tomorrow, to see if England can pull off the biggest Test run chase in their history. Thanks to two century partnerships – one from their two best players, the other a total bonus from a struggling pair of openers – they have given themselves an astonishingly good chance.

Updated

Stumps: England living the dream

57th over: England 259-3 (Root 77, Bairstow 72) It’s the last over of the day, and Bumrah shoulders the burden of bowling it himself. A single to each batter, and then Root shuts up shop – until the fifth ball, when he plays a swivel-pull for a single to bring up the 150 partnership – 151 off 32.4 overs. It’s been a masterclass.

And that’s stumps, with England beautifully placed to thrill a capacity crowd tomorrow – but they still need 119, and they always have a collapse in their back pocket, as they showed by losing three wickets for two this afternoon. What a day it’s been: a day for dreaming, and then finding that dreams can come at least halfway true.

Bairstow and Root acknowledge the applause after reaching their 150 partnership.
Bairstow and Root acknowledge the applause after reaching their 150 partnership. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images

Updated

56th over: England 256-3 (Root 75, Bairstow 70) Poor old Siraj returns to the deep with figures from a one-day international: 10-0-64-0. Back comes Mohammed Shami, who is also wicketless but doesn’t deserve to be. He keeps Bairstow quiet-ish, conceding just a single. Tomorrow, by the way, is now fully booked, every one of those free tickets snapped up. Fabulous news.

“I think,” says Phil Keegan, “Max Harrison is onto something; Young Bonny Jairstow has a real ring to it.” Ha.

55th over: England 254-3 (Root 74, Bairstow 69) Yes, Bumrah was changing ends. He draws a nick from Bairstow, but it’s a catch to third slip. Stokes might have a man there even now, but Bumrah has just the one slip, so it’s four more. For good measure, Bairstow adds a straight push for three.

On WinViz England are now rated three times more likely than India to win this match. If they do, it will be their highest run-chase in 142 years of Tests.

54th over: England 246-3 (Root 73, Bairstow 62) Bumrah, who has underdone the bowling changes today, now makes one when as far as we can tell he doesn’t have to. He takes himself off (possibly to change ends) and sends for Mohammed Siraj. The field says that he’ll be banging it in. Sure enough, he bowls a bouncer to Bairstow, who lapped up this diet when he was fed it by the New Zealanders. Bairstow hooks, bisecting the men in the deep – and going way over their heads. That’s the first six of the innings. The next ball is another bouncer, so high that it’s a wide. Que Siraj, Siraj.

Updated

Fifty to Bairstow!!

53rd over: England 236-3 (Root 71, Bairstow 55) Bairstow glances Shami to reach yet another fifty off 75 balls. He rubs it in with a cut for four. Since 14 June, he’s been Mr BoomBairstow, making 136, 162, 71 not out, 106 and now 55 not out. His average in this purplest of patches has been 176, his strike rate 103. Has any batter ever done better?

Target down to 150

52nd over: England 228-3 (Root 70, Bairstow 49) As Bumrah continues, Root plays the Platonic ideal of the cover drive – all touch and timing. And temperament. England need another 150.

“YBJ,” says Max Harrison, “set to be the first man to a thousand Test runs in 2022 if he hangs around. Unless Root pips him to it. Crazy. But good crazy.”

So crazy that you’ve called YJB YBJ, lol. But you’re quite right, these two are the batters of the year so far.

51st over: England 222-3 (Root 65, Bairstow 47) Off goes Jadeja and back comes Shami, so Bumrah is going for broke with 25 minutes to go. He bowls a long hop, for once, and Bairstow flays it away for four. Shami hits back with a lovely outswinger but, as so often in his career, it doesn’t take the edge. England need another 156.

50th over: England 217-3 (Root 64, Bairstow 43) Thakur is taken off at last, with figures (7-0-33-0) that by no means insult him. Back comes Bumrah and he immediately shows his class, beating Root outside off as he goes for an upper cut. But Root is in such good touch now that he still picks up a two and a single. The force is with him.

49th over: England 214-3 (Root 61, Bairstow 43) Jadeja is at his wits’ end, so he abandons the Ashley Giles impression and goes round the wicket. He doesn’t find the turn he’s looking for. He may have made a fine hundred in this match, but he still hasn’t taken a wicket.

Hundred partnership!

48th over: England 211-3 (Root 59, Bairstow 42) Bairstow, facing Thakur, plays yet another leg glance and that’s the hundred partnership. It’s also dropped! A tough chance, low to Pant’s left. The hundred came up off 23.3 overs. It’s still a stand of two halves, only they are rather unequal: a short period of attrition, followed by a longer passage of (dare I say it) dominance.

“Think...” said Steve Colwill a few minutes ago. “If it weren’t for that mad Broad over England would now only need 160-odd to win this.” True. But to be fair, the policy that brought us the mad over also yielded a flurry of wickets today, when Stokes bombed out the tail.

47th over: England 206-3 (Root 57, Bairstow 39) Jadeja lets out a squawk of self-loathing as he strays onto off stump, allowing Root to cover-drive for four. India are losing the plot for the second time in this innings. The way things are going, Kohli will soon be sledging Bumrah.

Fifty to Root! And the 200 up

46th over: England 201-3 (Root 52, Bairstow 39) Thakur continues and Root says thank you very much, dabbing for a single to reach yet another Test fifty. It’s his 82nd half-century for England (including the 27 hundreds), and it has been one of his best. With the field scattered, the singles keep flowing. And up comes the 200.

On WinViz, England are now favourites! With 53pc, to India’s 45. That seems misjudged, but maybe they’re going by Bumrah’s captaincy. It’s been the performance of a man who has no idea how to make the batters feel uncomfortable, except by bowling himself.

Joe Root celebrates his 82nd Test half- century.
Joe Root celebrates his 82nd Test half- century. Photograph: Jason Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters

Updated

45th over: England 196-3 (Root 49, Bairstow 37) Something must be done. The obvious move is for Bumrah to bring himself on, but instead he turns to Jadeja. At least that helps with the imbalance on the experience front. Jadeja concedes just a single and a leg-bye.

44th over: England 194-3 (Root 49, Bairstow 36) An experienced captain might have taken Siraj off, but here he is again. His first ball is short and Bairstow pulls it imperiously, well in front of square. Siraj, to his credit, fights back, with a nip-backer that finds Bairstow’s inside edge. The ball goes from bat to pad and somehow eludes the leg stump. Fortune favouring the brave.

Target below 200!

43rd over: England 187-3 (Root 48, Bairstow 30) In case Siraj isn’t grumpy enough, Thakur gives Bairstow a freebie on his pads, which he flicks to fine leg – timing it so well that although Siraj can reach it with a dive, he can’t stop it bobbling over the rope. The target, by the way, is below 200 now – another 192 needed.

Updated

42nd over: England 181-3 (Root 47, Bairstow 25) Siraj continues. Single to Root, single to Bairstow, single to Root, dot ball, single to Bairstow, single to Root. Five off the over without a big shot played in anger. Put that down to experience, facing inexperience.

So much has been happening that I’ve barely been able to open an email, sorry. But here’s one from Tharun Jimani. “My girlfriend recently introduced me to that other venerable English institution,” he says. “Love Island. While I’m still undecided on whether my enjoyment of the reality (?) show is ironic or not, I was wondering if any OBO readers partake of the same? And if so, which couple do they expect will win this season?

“Before you deem my email unfit for publication, consider that this may be my last shot at getting my girlfriend vaguely interested in Test cricket. The game needs all the fans it can get, Tim!” It does... but only the ones who are going to enjoy it. No force-feeding!

Roooooot!
Roooooot! Photograph: James Marsh/Shutterstock

Updated

Drinks: Root getting on top

41st over: England 176-3 (Root 44, Bairstow 23) Those assorted sweeps from Root have had the desired effect. Jadeja goes off, with 12-2-44-0, and on comes Shardul Thakur, so it’s relative inexperience at both ends. Bairstow plays a cover drive and Root a pull, though they each get only a single for it.

And that’s drinks, with Root getting England back on top but India still a good bet for the win. One more burst from Bumrah, and we could be down to Billings.

Updated

40th over: England 174-3 (Root 43, Bairstow 22) That burst of verbals from Siraj didn’t bother the batters, but he does seem to have unsettled himself. This over is all over the shop. Two singles, a two, and then Root, after getting something in his eye, receives a ball that is gift-wrapped and flicks it for four.

The last four overs have gone for 33. India are still firm favourites in my book, but they need a wicket.

Fifty partnership!

39th over: England 166-3 (Root 36, Bairstow 21) Bairstow, facing Jadeja, cuts for three to bring up the fifty partnership (52 off 14.3 overs). Root celebrates with a sweep for four, to add to the paddle and lap in Jadeja’s previous over. It’s been a stand of two halves: backs to the wall at first, after that clatter of wickets; then the counter attack, but conducted with some composure – more Rootian than Bairstowish.

Updated

38th over: England 157-3 (Root 30, Bairstow 18) Shami, for the second time this afternoon, hands over to Mohammed Siraj. Bairstow cashes in, sending a loosener skimming to the cover boundary to bring up the 150. And then he edges – into the cordon – and is dropped by Hanuma Vihari, who is perhaps standing too close at second slip. Bairstow went at it with hard hands, which is usually a bad idea but may have been what saved his skin.

Siraj gives him a volley, so we’re back to the dreaded sledging. I wish the players would realise that they’re far too good for that.

Updated

37th over: England 149-3 (Root 30, Bairstow 10) Root changes tack against Jadeja, bringing out the paddle and the lap. He gets four, and four more. He has 30 off 51 balls, even though he has kicked away at least ten of them. England need another 229 to win, and they probably need Root to get a hundred of them.

36th over: England 141-3 (Root 22, Bairstow 10) After beating Root twice on the inside edge, Shami beats Bairstow on the outside by turning the ball round and getting the reverse swing to go the other way. He’s such a good bowler.

Updated

35th over: England 138-3 (Root 20, Bairstow 9) A maiden from Jadeja to Bairstow, who has now faced 26 balls for his nine. But then he started slowly in the first innings...

“A squiz at Statsguru,” says Martin Burley, promisingly, “suggests that there are only three occasions where England have made a century opening partnership in Tests at a higher run rate than Lees and Crawley did today. Two of those three faster ones involved Trescothick (one with Vaughan, one with Strauss) and the other featured Sutcliffe, so they’re in good company.”

Sutcliffe! I didn’t know he had it in him.

34th over: England 138-3 (Root 20, Bairstow 9) Shami raps Root on the pad again! It’s not too high, but it could be going down. Bumrah doesn’t review, because he can’t afford to – and he’s right, as it was just missing leg stump.

“It’s a much better field now,” Sangakkara reckons. “Two slips, short midwicket, three men saving one, boundaries covered. More orthodox.” More old-school, certainly. Ben Stokes would have four slips, and quite possibly a long stop.

Joe Root is all smiles in the middle.
Joe Root is all smiles in the middle. Photograph: James Marsh/Shutterstock

Updated

33rd over: England 137-3 (Root 20, Bairstow 8) Jadeja is mixing it up, half aiming for the rough, half for middle stump. Root kicks a few away but plays into the covers when he can, with an upright bat. “Would you be sweeping out of the rough?” Nasser Hussain asks Kumar Sangakkara, a master at playing spin. “Once in a while,” he says. “With the sweep, it has to be instinctive, you don’t want to prejudge it.” The man is a qualified lawyer, he knows whereof he speaks.

Key event

32nd over: England 136-3 (Root 20, Bairstow 7) Bumrah gives himself a break and hands over to Shami. Root greets him with a glide for four, the Rootiest stroke in the book. Shami retorts with a superb in-ducker and goes up for LBW. A shake of the head from the ump. Another review from India (Pant’s decision, not Bukmrah’s, as he is off the field). It’s too high! India lose two reviews in five minutes, so for the second time in the match they’re down to their last one. And Root has a retort of his own, taking a forward step and whipping through midwicket. Mr Whippy!

31st over: England 128-3 (Root 12, Bairstow 7) Root misses a sweep and Jadeja wants a review! Not sure why, as it pitched outside leg. But Jadeja is doing a good job here, tying down an end. After going for 15 off his first two overs, he has conceded only 11 off his last six. Even with Bairstow there, the run rate has slowed to something resembling Test cricket as we knew it up to May 2022.

30th over: England 127-3 (Root 11, Bairstow 7) Bumrah has been sensational in this spell, but he was off colour with the new ball and now he goes too leg-stump-ish. Root helps himself to an easy glance for four and a tuck for a single.

“’If Joe Root was at No 3, as he surely should be,’” says Peter Wyatt, quoting me back at myself. “Are you sure? Root averages 38 at No.3, 51 at No.4.” Only because of a few Tests long ago – since lockdown, he’s averaged 47 at No 3. I just think it’s a cardinal error to make the three junior batters go in before the three senior ones. It’s the kind of management that went out of fashion in 1918.

Bumrah is just too good.
Bumrah is just too good. Photograph: Steve Bond/Shutterstock

Updated

29th over: England 122-3 (Root 6, Bairstow 7) As Jadeja continues over the wicket into the rough, KP isn’t talking to us, the viewers: he’s addressing the batters. “Kick it away, Jonny. Very good, outstanding.”

Updated

28th over: England 120-3 (Root 5, Bairstow 6) Bumrah continues, with that short run and straight arm, and Bairstow does well to clip an attempted yorker for a single. When Bumrah sneaks in a bouncer, Root thinks about the pull but pulls out of the stroke, wisely.

“So,” says Brendan Large on Twitter, “England are chasing nearly 400 in a Test & we’re talking (without a hint of sarcasm) about required rates. Of course they may fail but what fun this is! If they come up short and the knives come out will Ben go full gladiator post match? ‘ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED!’”

27th over: England 117-3 (Root 4, Bairstow 5) Root’s batting is unaffected. As Jadeja aims into the rough outside leg stump, he plays a reverse sweep, which doesn’t find the gap, and then wants another, though he settles for padding the ball away. “Be boring, Joe,” says Kevin Pietersen, “be boring.” Do as I say, not as I once did.

26th over: England 117-3 (Root 4, Bairstow 5) Root’s confidence as a runner has taken a knock, quite understandably. Facing Bumrah, he plays his signature shot, the glide to backward point, and waits for affirmation from Bairstow before setting off for what turns out to be a comfortable single. I suspect he’ll be fine if he can get through the next ten minutes – these two run very well together. The England fans in the crowd try to give him a boost with a burst of Joe Root, to the tune of Hey Jude.

25th over: England 114-3 (Root 2, Bairstow 4) After losing three wickets for two runs, England are going to go into their shells, right? Wrong. Jonny Bairstow gets off the mark with a gorgeous shot, rocking back to cut for four. Root, surely, needs to be the designated driver here, as he so often was for Eoin Morgan’s white-ball team.

Updated

Wicket!!! Lees run out 56 (England 109-3)

It’s a collapse! Lees faces Jadeja, Root calls for a tight single, Lees is slow off the mark, and he’s out by a mile. Sickening for him, after he played so well and so assertively – but gripping for the viewer.

Ollie Pope
Deary me. Photograph: Jason Cairnduff/Action Images/Reuters

Updated

24th over: England 109-2 (Lees 56, Root 1) Pope was drawn into playing at one that he could have left – the opposite of Crawley’s demise. But one led to the other, because the big inswing that sank Crawley preyed on Pope’s mind, so the ball that didn’t swing proved lethal. The crowd are suddenly making some noise, and Virat Kohli is trying to drown them out on his own. And here is Joe Root, shutting out the noise to get off the mark first ball with a nice easy clip off the toes.

Updated

Wicket!! Pope c Pant b Bumrah 0 (England 107-2)

Another one! Pope has a waft, gets a nick and gets a duck.

Jasprit Bumrah takes another one.
Jasprit Bumrah takes another one. Photograph: Alex Davidson/Getty Images

Updated

Tickets for tomorrow are free

Warwickshire’s boss, Stuart Cain, is talking on Sky. If there was still that TV show called What’s My Line?, they’d want him too as he wears a bow tie and looks more like a lovable old Latin teacher than a sports administrator.

He has good news: tomorrow is another free fifth day, though you will need a ticket – form an orderly queue at Edgbaston from 5pm.

Run rate required

England, even after that stumble in the last few minutes, have made 107 off 23 overs at a rollicking rate of 4.65. They need another 271 off 136 overs at a rate of ... 1.99!

Tea: England rocking

23rd over: England 107-1 (Lees 56, Pope 0) Shami comes back too: is Bumrah trying to start the whole innings again? Lees wafts at Shami’s first ball, as if trying to channel the spirit of his departed mate, then charges the second and misses the third. If Joe Root was at No 3, as he surely should be, he’d be having a gentle word. But Shami, as so often, ends up with only moral victories. And that’s tea, with England winning the session but India fighting back in the past few minutes, armed with a replacement ball. It’s riveting stuff.

Alex Lees chats with Virat Kohli as they come off for tea.
Alex Lees chats with Virat Kohli as they come off for tea. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images

Updated

22nd over: England 107-1 (Lees 56, Pope 0) So the change of ball, or bowler, does the trick. But Zak Crawley deserves far more praise than blame for that innings. A finer 46 you could not wish to see, and an opening stand of a hundred is as good as it gets for a team in the fourth innings. It may even have been beyond Ben Stokes’s wildest dreams.

Wicket! Crawley b Bumrah 46 (England 107-1)

Jasprit Bumrah does what a bowling captain has to do in a tight corner: he brings himself on. And it works! Crawley leaves the ball, just as everyone has been advising him to, but it’s a booming Bumrah inswinger that clips the off bail. Game on!

Zak Crawley’s face says it all here.
Zak Crawley’s face says it all here. Photograph: Ben Whitley/Shutterstock

Updated

21st over: England 106-0 (Lees 55, Crawley 46) Still no bowling change, which is surely fine by England. Thakur has a highly defensive field, just the one slip, but still concedes a single to each batter (Lees’s a streaky one, off the inside edge). India’s main strategy seems to be to try to get the ball changed, and they succeed after five balls of this over. Crawley greets the replacement ball with a sober prod.

“England’s first century opening stand,” says The Guardian’s own Ali Martin on Twitter, “since Hameed/Burns v India 4th inns at the Oval last summer ... took 40.3 overs ... Lees/Crawley today, 19.5.” If you’re reading this, Mr Burns or Mr Hameed, do let us know what you make of it all. Is it madness, method, or a bit of both?

A hundred partnership! By the openers!!

20th over: England 104-0 (Lees 54, Crawley 45) Bumrah, who has never captained a team before, keeps Siraj on, possibly because he just doesn’t know what else to do. Siraj does a bit better, managing three dots, but there’s still a wayward delivery that goes for four leg-byes and, before that, a clip from Crawley to bring up the hundred partnership. And these two are, on form, the worst of England’s specialist batters.

Up comes the hundred partnership. Well, well, well.
Up comes the hundred partnership. Well, well, well. Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images

Updated

19th over: England 98-0 (Lees 53, Crawley 44) The run rate is back up to five an over and I suspect it’s going to stay there until a wicket falls. Crawley, in full flow now, sees a half-volley from Tharkur and drives it back straight for four, then gets just enough width to open the face and play a cover glide that just oozes class. After making 22 off his first 53 balls, he has added 22 more off the last 12, and done it in style. India must be grateful that he’s so out of form.

Updated

18th over: England 90-0 (Lees 53, Crawley 36) One of the great things about getting a four and a single is that you’re then up the other end for the beginning of the next over. As Siraj continues, Crawley greets him with another regal cover drive, then shimmies over to off stump to whip it through midwicket like the king of all, Sir Viv. And he still stays cool enough to taken a single two balls later. Come on Zak, make this a big one.

“Oh dear,” says Phil Markham. “India appear to have made the Kiwi mistake of failing to occupy the crease long enough or profitably enough to dash England’s belief.”

The target is now under 300

17th over: England 81-0 (Lees 53, Crawley 27) Jadeja, who so nearly nabbed Crawley in his last over, is taken off. On comes Shardul Thakur and Crawley celebrates with a classic cover drive, to bring the target down below 300 – just where Ben Stokes likes it. Taking his cue from Lees, Crawley follows the big shot with a bit of tip-and-run. He’s been outscored two-to-one here, yet he has played very well – apart from one waft at Siraj, a few minutes ago, to remind us that he’s still Zak Crawley.

A fast fifty to Lees!

16th over: England 76-0 (Lees 53, Crawley 22) Siraj goes round the wicket, trying to cramp Lees’s style and succeeding for three balls. Then Lees adjusts, rocks back and cuts for four to reach his second Test fifty off only 44 balls. It’s his second Test fifty, and by far his best Test innings.

“If any of us needed proof that Test cricket is the greatest of all sports,” says William Milner, “then surely this is it. Not so long ago, all of us would have written this run chase off and England would have collapsed to a miserable 150 or so all out.

“But now I believe every single person in that dressing room thinks they will win this. Of course they still might collapse, but I love the belief and if they do win this I think it trumps the last 3 victories. Meanwhile great to see a full house at Edgbaston on a Monday - I’m guessing tomorrow will be packed too.

“On a separate issue what’s you view on Kohli? I love his passion and will to win but I do think he crosses a line sometimes…” Absolutely. He’s 80pc passion, 20pc pain in the arse.

Alex Lees celebrates his swifty fifty.
Alex Lees celebrates his swifty fifty. Photograph: Steve Bond/Shutterstock

Updated

Drinks: a narrow squeak for Crawley

15th over: England 70-0 (Lees 47, Crawley 22) Jadeja reels off four dots, enough to make Crawley pull out the reverse-sweep – and he so nearly perishes! He under-edges the ball on to his boot, it pops up to short leg, the Indians are celebrating and the soft signal is out. But the third replay shows the ball just brushing the ground before the boot, prompting cheers of relief in the stands. And that’s drinks, with England winning the first act of this final innings. They need another 308.

Updated

14th over: England 69-0 (Lees 46, Crawley 22) Lees, facing Siraj again, repeats the trick of getting five off the first two balls of the over – including a superb upper cut for four. He was compared to Alastair Cook in his first few Tests, when he was tongue-tied. Three months later, he’s Cook on coke.

Alex Lees looks in fine form.
Alex Lees looks in fine form. Photograph: James Marsh/Shutterstock

Updated

13th over: England 64-0 (Lees 41, Crawley 22) Jadeja isn’t turning the ball, Kevin Pietersen says, and he needs that “because then he gets his tail up, and it brings in his natural variation that rolls onto the pads”. KP knows all about the perils of facing slow laft-armers. This over is more characteristic from Jadeja and calmer from England, just two singles from it. But Lees and Crawley have already beaten their previous highest opening stand, which was 59, and it’s a big bonus for England.

Updated

12th over: England 62-0 (Lees 40, Crawley 21) Shami does come off now, to be replaced by Mohammed Siraj. Lees is itching to get after him too. He goes on the charge, but has the sense to block when he gets there; then he uses the angle, right-arm over, to dab for four. He has raced to 40, which is just what he needed after a few flops.

“While I do think Stokes might be running towards the danger a bit too enthusiastically with his own batting,” says Will Vignoles, “I do think people complaining about the overall approach seem to have forgotten that England tried batting in the ‘sensible’, Test-match-approved fashion from 2019 and all it got them was one win in 17 matches and a series of abject humiliations.

“The new approach might still all go down in flames but I’d much rather England throw some punches back rather than just absorb the pressure as they did under Silverwood. Thanks for the OBO as ever!”

11th over: England 58-0 (Lees 36, Crawley 21) Lees is trying to do unto Jadeja what Rishabh Pant did to Jack Leach in the first innings. He takes the standard five an over off the first two balls of this one – a slog-sweep for four, a cut for a single. Jadeja, usually so steady, has 2-0-15-0.

10th over: England 53-0 (Lees 31, Crawley 21) Bumrah keeps Shami on, showing faith in his opening partner, and it’s repaid with a maiden. Even after that, the run rate remains above five an over.

“Afternoon Tim, afternoon all,” said Em Jackson a few minutes ago. “Well 52 overs left and under 400 to score ... surely it’s on? ‘It’ being an England win/collapse* by close of play. (*delete as applicable)”

9th over: England 53-0 (Lees 31, Crawley 21) A significant moment as Bumrah takes himself off and turns to spin, surely earlier than he planned. It’s Ravi Jadeja, and Alex Lees is giving him the charge first ball! He blasts a drive for four, then misses a sweep – steady on... Then he dabs a single, that’s more like it. A single to Crawley too, and now Lees is reverse-sweeping! For four, to bring up the England fifty off 54 balls. They only need another 325.

Updated

8th over: England 43-0 (Lees 22, Crawley 20) Crawley has been leaving the ball better in this innings, learning his lesson at last, and he reaps the rewards as Shami goes too middle-stump-ish. Crawley’s so strong there that he picks up two whipped twos and an on-driven four, stroked past the umpire with the greatest of ease. Greg Chappell would have been happy with that.

7th over: England 35-0 (Lees 22, Crawley 12) Jasprit Bumrah, superstar that he is, seems a bit unnerved right now. When he tries a yorker at both openers, each one comes out as a full toss. He’s rattled, and England are rattling along

6th over: England 30-0 (Lees 19, Crawley 10) Thanks Jim, sparky stuff as ever, and afternoon everyone. For you, dear reader, this may be rather like seeing Pant get out and Pujara come in. But then England could do with a little sobriety right now, and Zak Crawley is trying hard to provide it, against all his instincts. Facing Shami, makes a late leave, and picks up three off the middle of the bat.

Updated

That’s me done for the day. Thanks for your company, over to the masterful Tim de Lisle to take you through what promises to be a riveting afternoon. Bye!

5th over: England 26-0 (Lees 18, Crawley 7) Crawley works a leg-side ball from Bumrah off his pads for four with swiss-clock timing. Mark Butcher on comms says that it could be a “life changing boundary”. I guess it could. If he loses his wicket any time soon it could be life changing in a different way.

4th over: England 19-0 (Lees 17, Crawley 2) Crawley digs out a Shami yorker, it squiddles into the leg side and they pick up a single.

3rd over: England 18-0 (Lees 17, Crawley 1) Crawley drops and runs to get off the mark. Lees then gets four more with a flick to fine leg. The Durham opener is proactive, picking up a brace of brace’s into the covers. A wild swish at the last ball misses by a ghostly whisper.

Brian Withington has set himself up:

“Hi James, if England chase this down I hereby announce that I will change my name by deed poll to Brian B**B*** Withington”

I WILL REMEMBER THIS BRIAN.

2nd over: England 9-0 (Lees 9, Crawley 0) Ay up! Lees trots down the wicket to Shami and hacks him through midwicket for four! Lees is proactive in defence and a push into off gets him two. Shami then beats him, twice.

1st over: England 1-0 (Lees 1, Crawley 0) A nudge from Lees to Bumrah gets England underway.

This made me chuckle, from Adrian Goldman in Helsinki:

“I think it’s fair to say that if they chase 378 successfully, they’ll be able to call it anything they want - BrexitBall, BorisBall, GreasedLittlePigletBall - and we won’t bat an eye.”

Here come Crawley and Lees. Are you sitting comfortably?

Simples.

India 245 All Out! England need 378 runs to win!

Bumrah launches Stokes for six off the top edge and tries to repeat the shot the next ball but is caught by Crawley in the deep. Stokes has three wickets after lunch to mop up the tail without any real damage. England scamper off to strap the pads on.

There are 57 overs left in the day. Stokes’ boys are going to go for the runs, be in no doubt about that. Strap yourselves in, this could be a bumpy ride.

That’s it for the Indian innings and England have a mountain to climb to win this test.
That’s it for the Indian innings and England have a mountain to climb to win this test. Photograph: Geoff Caddick/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

81st over: India 239-9 (Bumrah 1, Siraj 1) The new ball is available but Leach continues, India have had slim pickings in the run department since lunch.

WICKET! Jadeja b Stokes 23 (India 236-9)

Jadeja chops on! Stoke bangs one in short of a length and Jadeja flashes a bat at it but the ball canons off and into the timbers! Now England need ONE more (I got ahead of myself earlier)

80th over: India 236-9 (Bumrah 0, Siraj 0)

Jadeja out
Jadeja is out! Photograph: Steve Bond/Shutterstock

Updated

79th over: India 236-8 (Jadeja 23, Bumrah 0) ...And just one more off Leach’s latest too. It’s all very snoozy... but wait, what’s this... (how many ellipsis’/ellipsI? can one man use...?)

78th over: India 235-8 (Jadeja 22, Bumrah 0) Just one more single off Stokes. On we go.

Updated

77th over: India 234-8 (Jadeja 21, Bumrah 0) Leach bowls to Bumrah and goes up for an LBW appeal for one that straightens. The England players seem disinterested and don’t review... only for the replay to show three reds, it was well out!

“Hi James
Love the OBO, long time lurker, first time messenger.
Was sent this Wisden article by a friend on the new (sigh) bazball phenomena which seemed something of an insight in what England are aiming for; namely as per Waugh’s Aussies, intimidatory batting. The objective is speed of run accumulation, and one outcome I hadn’t considered, a big total compiled in 3 or 4 sessions that allows the bowlers lots of time and runs to play with, setting ultra attacking fields

Not sure this side will reach the heights of that aus team but its a good strategy to emulate!
Cheers
Tom”

Cheers to you Tom and very interesting stuff. Glad you finally plucked up the courage to email in, we’ve been expecting you... we are a very welcoming bunch on the OBO so don’t make it your last!

75th over: India 233-8 (Jadeja 20, Bumrah 0) Stokes continues to pound the pitch, just a couple come off it.

74th over: India 231-8 (Jadeja 19, Bumrah 0) Just a single off Leach.

WICKET! Shami ct Lees b Stokes 13 (India 230-8)

Stokes starts up after lunch and gets Shami with a short ball that he lifts to Lees behind square. Two more to get for England, before they have a whole load of runs to get that is.

73rd over: India 230-8 (Jadeja 18, Bumrah 0)

Ben Stokes celebrates taking the wicket of Mohammed Shami.
Ben Stokes celebrates taking the wicket of Mohammed Shami. Photograph: James Marsh/Shutterstock

Updated

Lunch over - let’s do the afternoon session. Si?

Lions Squad Announced:

Updated

LUNCH - India 229-7 - Lead by 361 runs.

72nd over: India 229-7 (Jadeja 12, Shami 8) Leach throws up some tempters but Jadeja and Shami aren’t tempted. Time to raid the fridge!

71st over: India 226-7 (Jadeja 12, Shami 8) Shami gets a glove on a steepler from Potts and it runs away for four. We’ve got one over before lunch and Jack Leach is going to bowl it.

“Still think it is a bobbins tactic” chirps back Tom. Sanket Dhume is inclined to agree with you Rhodesy:

“Am I the only one that finds it hilarious that for all the big talk from Stokes & co. about being positive and aggressive, they revert to bowling bumpers round the wicket to number 8, 9 & 10s again?”

Updated

71st over: India 218-7 (Jadeja 12, Shami 8) Shami is the new batter, England know all too well that he can wield the bat effectively after he flogged them in the Lord’s Test last year. Sure enough, he steps back and carves Leach away for four.

70th over: India 212-7 (Jadeja 11, Shami 3) DROP! Anderson shells Jadeja pedalling backwards, he parries the ball up and can’t cling onto the re-bound! That could be costly. Anderson is livid with himself, he would have expected to catch that.

WICKET! Thakur ct Crawley b Potts 4 (India 207-7)

Just as my mate Tom flings me a text with some fruity language to bemoan England’s short pitched tactics... Potts pockets Thakur with a bouncer that he pulls straight down Crawley’s throat at deep fine leg.

Shardul Thakur walks back to the pavilion after losing his wicket for four runs.
Shardul Thakur walks back to the pavilion after losing his wicket for four runs. Photograph: Geoff Caddick/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

69th over: India 207-6 (Jadeja 9, Thakur 4) Leach is keeping the pressure on, Jadeja can’t get him away. There’s a sense of frustration building here...

68th over: India 205-6 (Jadeja 8, Thakur 3) Thakur is ok and he gets into line to Potts and punches him away for a couple.

OUCH! Potts skids a short one onto Thakur that crashes into his lid. That gave off a real clunk. Thakur thankfully seems ok.

Thakur swaps helmets after being struck off the bowling of Matthew Potts.
Thakur swaps helmets after being struck off the bowling of Matthew Potts. Photograph: David Davies/PA

Updated

67th over: India 203-6 (Jadeja 8, Thakur 1) Thakur gets off the mark with a push to mid-on. It’s all gone oh so quiet.

66th over: India 201-6 (Jadeja 7, Thakur 0) Just a single off Potts’ latest. England have tightened things up.

65th over: India 200-6 (Jadeja 6, Thakur 0) Leach keeps things tight, just a single to Jadeja. ‘The Nut’ bowled well here so far.

64th over: India 199-6 (Jadeja 5, Thakur 0) Just a single off Potts’ latest. England still licking their lips at the prospect of this chase?

WICKET! Pant ct Root b Leach 57 (India 198-6)

Leach gets his man! Pant tries to reverse-sweep him out of the rough stuff but only serves to pat it to Root at slip. India lead by 330. The dangerous Shardul Thakur is the new batter. Leach sends down a wicket-maiden.

63rd over: India 198-6 (Jadeja 4, Thakur 0)

Jack Leach dismisses the dangerman Rishabh Pant for 57.
Jack Leach dismisses the dangerman Rishabh Pant for 57. Photograph: David Davies/PA

Updated

62nd over: India 198-5 (Pant 57, Jadeja 4) Potts sends down a lesser spotted maiden.

Gary Naylor has been getting his Moses on as setting out the commandments/characteristics of BazBall:

“‘Bazball’ which is something new, although it has borrowed elements from Clive Lloyd’s and Steve Waugh’s approach (though not, alas, their players). India, especially in those extraordinary wins with a second string in Aus, might be the closest template.

1. Players are backed in terms of continuity of selection and in public. Many of us think this has gone too far with Crawley and some are having doubts about Lees and might resurrect such about Leach if he is manhandled again.

2. At any point in the match, the preferred destination is the win. That means posting three or four slips when there would be one under Root and batting to build winning positions or chase challenging targets.

3. Momentum is real, so seek to seize it whenever it seems to be sliding away. So too is confidence, so never knock it, or even show its diminution.

4. Treat your opponent with respect. Some way to go on this, but the sledging does seem to have been replaced, to an extent, by smiles and/or rueful grins.

It is still early days, but these changes (more evident at the grounds than on TV) are substantive. Whether they are effective will not turn on winning or losing against an outstanding side that only Root, Anderson and possibly Stokes (and Bairstow on 2022 form) would get in, even without both first choice openers. It does face a provisional judgment after the SA series though.”

61st over: India 198-5 (Pant 57, Jadeja 4) Jack Leach, him of the ten wickets in the previous game is into the attack. His first ball is met by an audacious stroke from Pant, stretching far outside off stump and sweeping for four to the leg boundary. Leach responds well with five dots, and there is quite pronounced turn.

60th over: India 194-5 (Pant 53, Jadeja 4) Jadeja is the new batter and an outside edge that trickles down to third for four sees him off the mark straight away.

Updated

WICKET! Iyer ct Anderson b Potts 19 (India 190-5)

Another soft dismissal, Potts gets Iyer to plop one into the hands of Jimmy Anderson at short-mid wicket.

Shreyas Iyer is out for a breezy 19.
Shreyas Iyer is out for a breezy 19. Photograph: Ben Whitley/Shutterstock

Updated

59th over: India 186-4 (Pant 53, Iyer 19) Pant brings up FIFTY with a glance off Broad to the fine leg boundary. Broad is ‘ticking’ in the words of Nasser. Broad has one of those faces that when displeased would be called ‘mardy’ from where I hail from...

58th over: India 178-4 (Pant 46, Iyer 18) Shreyas Iyer bangs Matthew Potts for a couple of fours, one through point and another through the covers. Nasser Hussain on comms says that these two batters can take the game away from England in the next half an hour. I think it might be gone already, I just can’t see England obliterating this India bowling line-up in the way they did New Zealand’s. The lead is already 300 and some.

57th over: India 170-4 (Pant 46, Iyer 10) DROP! Crawley can’t hold onto a flying chance at gully, the ball hitting his wrist and then hitting the turf. Pant then *improves Broad’s mood hugely* by trying to ramp him off the last ball. He misses and Stuart gives him a volley, Umpire Dar having to step in. Maybe that will give England the bit between their teeth. Have I mentioned they’ve been flat this morning?

56th over: India 168-4 (Pant 45, Iyer 9) The impressive Potts is impressive again - looking slightly more threatening with his Peaky Blinders barnet he immediately looks England’s most, well, threatening bowler.

David Barnet is no fan of the term B**B** either:

“Not only does the word sound horrible, but the very term is vacuous and reductive. As Theresa May may still say: ‘BazBall means BazBall’. And I liked the way you called it an ‘idealogy’... the current England performance may contract your neologism.”

55th over: India 167-4 (Pant 44, Iyer 9) Eight runs come from Broad’s over - Iyer lays into a wayward ball from Broad and splices it over gully. England have been poor in the first 45 minutes this morning, Pujara’s gifted wicket a undeserved bonus. Here comes Matthew Potts to improve my grump.

54th over: India 159-4 (Pant 43, Iyer 2) Sure enough Pant rocks back to a short-ish ball from Anderson and laces it through mid-wicket for four.

Martin Wright is on the line:

“Morning James, tempting to conclude that India are showing England how to play Bazball with that magic additional ingredient of, er, intelligence. In other words, have a seasoned top order to see off the new ball, and lay a platform for a middle order to explode and batter a tiring attack around the park.As opposed to coming out all guns blazing from the start, aim wild drives at decent swinging deliveries and leave too much for even Johnny to rescue.And yes, can we retire ‘Bazball’ about, er now, please?”

Brian Withington feels the same: “B**B*** - I can’t even bring myself to spell it out!”

Another fifty for Rishabh Pant of Bazball India.
Another fifty for Rishabh Pant of Bazball India. Photograph: James Marsh/Shutterstock

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53rd over: India 154-4 (Pant 38, Iyer 1) The bowling change does the trick for Ben Stokes, Shreyas Iyer the new man. Pant has been rather becalmed so far this morning, I wonder if he’ll start to up the anti now Pujara has departed?

WICKET! Pujara ct Lees b Broad 66 (India 153-4)

Just as I was about to say that England have been a bit flat and uninspired this morning... they are gifted a wicket they don’t really deserve. Inexplicably Pujara steers a short and wide ball by Broad straight to Lees at backward point. Tame end to an important knock.

Stuart Broad gets a lucky breakthrough with the wicket of Pujara.
Stuart Broad gets a lucky breakthrough with the wicket of Pujara. Photograph: James Marsh/Shutterstock

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52nd over: India 152-3 (Pujara 66, Pant 38) Pujara plays with ‘Fairy soft’ hands to glide Anderson away for four wide of the slips. Here comes Broad.

51st over: India 148-3 (Pujara 62, Pant 38) A couple off Root, Stuart Broad is warming up so this could be his last.

Robert Speed has the first email of the day, he’s clearly trying to jinx Rishabh...

“I have rarely if ever seen Pant troubled in the slightest when playing a defensive shot, or no shot. Only gets out playing an attacking shot. A sign of how good he is with bat in hand.”

Admirable effort Robert, let’s see if it does the biz. England need wickets, quick wickets.

50th over: India 146-3 (Pujara 61, Pant 37) A threatening over from Anderson as he finds some bounce on consecutive back of a length deliveries, the ball spitting onto Pujara’s gloves and bat handle. Just a single from the over.

49th over: India 145-3 (Pujara 61, Pant 36) Pant rocks back and crunches Root away for four. 20 runs have come already this morning, the lead is 277.

48th over: India 140-3 (Pujara 61, Pant 31) Pujara is ticking along in a Pant-esque fashion this morning. He plays a delightful square drive off Anderson for four and follows it up with a wristy flick off his toes that skims away to the fence.

How do we see this game going? Are India already out of sight on 272 ahead with their gun bowling attack? Let me know your thoughts and theories!

47th over: India 131-3 (Pujara 53, Pant 31) Root is bowling well, and he’ll have to - Pujara is a fine player of spin and Pant is a destructive player of the twirly stuff. Four byes go through Billings’ legs. Pujara’s foot movement is crisp as ever.

Joe Root in bowling action.
Joe Root in bowling action. Photograph: James Marsh/Shutterstock

Updated

46th over: India 126-3 (Pujara 51, Pant 29) Anderson creaks into action, his first delivery looked particularly laboured and a bit stiff. Nevertheless, he’s on the button from the get go and it’s just a Pujara single off the over. Joe Root is going to twirl away from the other end.

The players take the field, Jimmy Anderson has the new ball - PLAY!

Preamble

Hello everyone and welcome to the day four OBO of England v India at Edgbaston.

Don’t like Mondays? Tell me why! Is it because England are a long way behind in this Test match and the ramifications of the ‘BazBall’ idealogy are coming home to roost? How long, by the way, before the term ‘BazBall’ becomes teeth gnawingly annoying? Are we there already? Let me know!

The contrasting methods of Pujara and Pant served to thwart England yesterday afternoon and into the evening, stretching India’s lead to 257 runs with seven more wickets in which to bat this game out of sight.

Now, England will surely go for whatever target they are set by Bumrah and co and who knows, maybe we will see something mind-boggling again in Birmingham? BUT, at what point does this score become definitively out of reach for even the most delusionally optimistic exponents and believers of ‘The New Way’? 400? 500? Is a fourth innings target ever truly out of sight anymore?

I guess we might have some answers soon enough, play is set to get underway at 10:30AM BRITISH SUMMERTIME.

Join us, and do get in touch, it will not be dull. Promise.

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