Gill says ‘70-30’ for India victory as England chase 399

Published February 5, 2024
Indian batter Shubman Gill sweeps during the second Test 
against England at the Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy Cricket Stadium 
on Sunday.—AFP
Indian batter Shubman Gill sweeps during the second Test against England at the Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy Cricket Stadium on Sunday.—AFP

VISAKHAPATNAM: India’s Shubman Gill said on Sunday the hosts remain favourites to win the second Test after his century left England needing a record chase of 399 on day three.

England, who lead the five-match series 1-0, reached 67-1 at stumps after opener Ben Duckett fell for 28 in Visakhapatnam.

Left-hander Duckett put on an attacking 50-run stand with fellow opener Zak Crawley, who is still batting on 29, before Ravich­andran Ashwin got him out for his 497th Test wicket.

Nightwatchman Rehan Ahm­ed, on nine, joined Crawley with Eng­land needing another 332 for win.

“Definitely pleased but I left a few out there. We could have done with a few more runs,” said Gill. “I think it’s 70-30 at the moment. Morning session will be key. We’ve seen there is moisture in the morning, and help for fast bowlers and spinners.”

The highest fourth-innings target successfully chased against India is England’s 378 at Edgbaston in 2022, and the most successful in India was when the hosts got 387 against England in 2008.

Spinners Tom Hartley and Ahmed combined to bowl out India for 255 after Gill’s 104 on a day of bowling and fielding brilliance.

Veteran pace bowler James Anderson struck early to remove the openers, and India slipped further after a stunning catch by captain Ben Stokes before Gill stabilised the innings.

Anderson backed England to do the job with their attacking “Baz­ball” style of play, which was on display when they turned a 190-run deficit in the opener to go one up.

“The chat last night from the coach was that if they get 600, we were going to go for it,” said Anderson. “It makes it very clear to everyone that we will try to do it tomorrow. I know there are 180 overs left in the game, but we will try to do it in 60 or 70.”

GILL HITS FORM

Gill hit his third Test ton, and first in his 12 innings since March 2023, to pull India out from 122-4 with two key stands including 89 runs with Axar Patel.

He reached the hundred with a single off debutant spinner Shoaib Bashir and raised his bat to a cheering Sunday crowd.

He soon attempted a reverse sweep and departed when Bashir got him caught behind, a dismissal that was turned down by the umpire but replays showed the ball grazed the batsman’s glove before wicket-keeper Ben Foakes took a sharp catch.

Gill had two lucky escapes on four, both close lbw calls and one successfully reviewed, but then batted fluently with his flicks and drives until his exit.

England kept chipping away as Hartley, who returned figures of 4-77 with his left-arm spin, sent back Axar lbw for 45 to leave India six down by tea.

Ashwin played a stubborn knock of 29 before Ahmed took him down to wrap up the innings with his third strike.

England missed part-time spinner Joe Root on the field for most of the day after the senior batsman hurt his finger while fielding in the morning, but Anderson said the time away was precautionary.

In the first session, Shreyas Iyer made 29 and was out after a moment of magic by Stokes.

Iyer attempted a big hit off Hartley but Stokes sprinted back from mid-off and dived at full stre­tch to pull off a screamer of a catch.

Anderson, in an excellent morning spell of fast bowling, rattled Rohit Sharma’s stumps with a superb delivery that pitched and moved away from the right-hander.

The old warhorse then got the left-handed Yashasvi Jaiswal caught at first slip, for his 695th Test wicket. India had a lead of 143 at the start of their second innings and began the day on 28-0.

SCOREBOARD

INDIA (1st Innings) 396 (Y. Jaiswal 209; J. Anderson 3-47, R. Ahmed 3-65, S. Bashir 3-138)

ENGLAND (1st Innings) 253 (Z. Crawley 76, B. Stokes 47; J. Bumrah 6-45, K. Yadav 3-71)

INDIA (2nd Innings, overnight 28-0):

Y. Jaiswal c Root b Anderson 17

R. Sharma b Anderson 13

S. Gill c Foakes b Bashir 104

S. Iyer c Stokes b Hartley 29

R. Patidar c Foakes b Ahmed 9

A. Patel lbw b Hartley 45

K.S. Bharat c Stokes b Ahmed 6

R. Ashwin c Foakes b Ahmed 29

K. Yadav c Duckett b Hartley 0

J. Bumrah c Bairstow b Hartley 0

M. Kumar not out 0

EXTRAS (LB-2, NB-1) 3

TOTAL (all out, 78.3 overs) 255

FALL OF WICKETS: 1-29 (Rohit), 2-30 (Jaiswal), 3-111 (Iyer), 4-122 (Patidar), 5-211 (Gill), 6-220 (Axar), 7-228 (Bharat), 8-229 (Yadav), 9-255 (Bumrah)

BOWLING: Anderson 10-1-29-2, Bashir 15-0-58-1, Ahmed 24.3-5-88-3, Root 2-1-1-0, Hartley 27-3-77-4 (1nb)

ENGLAND (2nd Innings):

Z. Crawley not out 29

B. Duckett c Bharat b Ashwin 28

R. Ahmed not out 9

EXTRAS (NB-1) 1

TOTAL (for one wicket, 14 overs) 67

STILL TO BAT: O. Pope, J. Root, J. Bairstow, B. Stokes, B. Foakes, T. Hartley, S. Bashir, J. Anderson

FALL OF WICKET: 1-50 (Duckett)

BOWLING: Bumrah 5-1-9-0, Kumar 2-0-19-0 (1nb), Yadav 4-0-21-0, Ashwin 2-0-8-1, Axar 1-0-10-0

Published in Dawn, February 5th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

When medicine fails
Updated 18 Nov, 2024

When medicine fails

Between now and 2050, medical experts expect antibiotic resistance to kill 40m people worldwide.
Nawaz on India
Updated 18 Nov, 2024

Nawaz on India

Nawaz Sharif’s hopes of better ties with India can only be realised when New Delhi responds to Pakistan positively.
State of abuse
18 Nov, 2024

State of abuse

DESPITE censure from the rulers and society, and measures such as helplines and edicts to protect the young from all...
Football elections
17 Nov, 2024

Football elections

PAKISTAN football enters the most crucial juncture of its ‘normalisation’ era next week, when an Extraordinary...
IMF’s concern
17 Nov, 2024

IMF’s concern

ON Friday, the IMF team wrapped up its weeklong unscheduled talks on the Fund’s ongoing $7bn programme with the...
‘Un-Islamic’ VPNs
Updated 17 Nov, 2024

‘Un-Islamic’ VPNs

If curbing pornography is really the country’s foremost concern while it stumbles from one crisis to the next, there must be better ways to do so.