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ENG vs IND, 1st Test: Pope hundred puts England on track at end of Day 2 after India lower-order collapse

ENG vs IND, 1st Test: Pope hundred puts England on track at end of Day 2 after India lower-order collapse

The Hindu3 hours ago

Whether India lives to regret the fact that it added just 112 runs to its day one total of 359 for three in the first Test against England at Headingley will eventually depend on Jasprit Bumrah's golden arm, for the 31-year-old magician has this remarkable ability to inflate the value of every total his team makes.
And on Saturday, he tried his utmost to make India's 471 to seem even bigger, and to erase the memory of his side losing the last seven wickets for just 41 runs. The pacer partly succeeded (13-2-48-3), but a lack of pressure from the other end and some bad catching ensured that by stumps, England had cut the deficit by 209 for the loss of three wickets.
Bumrah sent Zak Crawley back in the very first over, with Karun Nair completing a fine catch at first slip. He dismissed a well-set Ben Duckett (62, 94b, 9x4) by forcing him to chop one on, excised Joe Root (28, 58b, 2x4) and even had Harry Brook caught in the last over only for it to be a no-ball.
But both Duckett and Pope were dropped off Bumrah, with the former by the usually safe Ravindra Jadeja at gully on 15 (team: 39 for one) and the latter by Yashasvi Jaiswal in the cordon on 60 (129 for two).
Ollie Pope duly capitalised, scoring his ninth Test hundred (100 batting, 131b, 13x4), dominating the bowling post-tea. So clean was his stroke-making that even the sun, which had disappeared during a 40-minute rain delay after India's innings and played hide and seek thereafter, burst out again in glorious fashion.
Will this hopeful message that both scoreboard pressure and Indian bowling's overall threat could be countered on a strip still good to bat reach his teammates' ears? Sunday will tell.
Jasprit Bumrah of India celebrates with teammates after taking the wicket of Joe Root of England during Day Two of the 1st Rothesay Test Match between England and India at Headingley. | Photo Credit: Getty Images
Earlier, India's overnight batters Shubman Gill and Rishabh Pant hardly appeared in any discomfort. Skipper Ben Stokes mixed things up, employing two short-covers and a silly mid-off to entice Gill into a drive. It was to the Indian skipper's credit that he refused to fall into the trap.
Pant, at the other end, resembled an on-and-off volcano with its layered eruptions. He paddled Shoaib Bashir and spanked him for a six over square leg to move into the 90s, but quietened down and rotated strike thereafter. On 99 however, a one-handed six over cow corner off Bashir brought him his seventh Test century.
RELATED | India vs England Highlights, 1st Test Day 2: Pope hundred lifts ENG to 206/3 vs IND
The subsequent celebration would have made an Olympic gymnast proud, for so perfect was his somersault, with a landing stable and controlled, letting his stout body absorb the impact and maintain terrific balance.
However, Gill's dismissal by Bashir – caught at deep backward square-leg for 147 (227b, 19x4, 1x6) – precipitated a collapse. Karun's first visit to the crease as an international batter in eight years and three months lasted 13 minutes and four balls.
Off an inspired Stokes (20-2-66-4), Pope caught Karun superbly at short extra-cover, with a leap to his left in true football goalkeeper style, pushing off from the contralateral leg (opposite side) to get the perfect lift and velocity.
Pant (134, 178b, 12x4, 6x6) was trapped in front by Josh Tongue, while Shardul Thakur paid the price for a reckless shot on the stroke of lunch. It was not long before a potential 600-plus total shrunk badly.

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