
China Open: Satwik-Chirag reach quarterfinals, HS Prannoy crashes out
The second game followed a similar trajectory, with the Indonesians pulling ahead 14-10. But once again, the Indian pair clawed their way back, levelling the scores at 18-18 before holding their nerve in the final exchanges to seal a confidence-boosting win.In contrast, it was a disappointing outing for world No. 9 HS Prannoy, who went down fighting against Chinese Taipei's Chou Tien Chen. After taking the first game 21-18, Prannoy struggled with the pace and consistency of the sixth seed, eventually losing 21-15, 21-8 in the next two games. The match lasted 65 minutes, with Chou dominating the decider as Prannoy's challenge fizzled out.While Prannoy's exit ends India's campaign in men's singles, Satwik and Chirag's progression keeps the tricolour flying high in doubles. The world No. 3 pair will next face either the Korean duo of Kang Min Hyuk and Seo Seung Jae or China's Liang Weikeng and Wang Chang in what promises to be another high-voltage clash.- EndsMust Watch
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News18
2 hours ago
- News18
Drama! India Reject Ben Stokes' Offer To Shake Hands And Accept Draw In 4th Test
The drawn fourth Test in the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy had remained drama-free, but only until the final hour of the last day. With 15 overs left and India's score at 386/4 with no result in sight, England captain Ben Stokes offered Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar the chance to draw with a shake of hands. However, the Indians rejected, airing Stokes. The on-field umpires tried to step in and take Stokes' offer to the Indians, but got the same answer. India wanted to play on, and they did. At that moment, Jadeja was at 89 (173), and Sundar was not too behind at 80 (188) and clearly they wanted to get to their centuries.


India Today
2 hours ago
- India Today
Young India refuse to fall: Manchester Test ends in draw, series alive
Sport gives us moments we never forget - the kind etched in memory, passed down like folklore. It gives us tales to whisper to our children and shout to our grandchildren. Tales of grit, defiance, and the audacity to dream. The latest chapter was written not by a team stacked with legends, but by a patched-up Indian side, bruised by injuries and seemingly out of breath - and yet bursting with a stone's throw from the Theatre of Dreams, India stitched together a dream of their own. What felt unthinkable one grey afternoon became hope, then belief, then something bordering on magic. They were 0 for 2 - in real terms, perhaps 0 for 3 with Pant broken and padded up. England had a 311-run cushion. Five sessions to vs IND, 4th Test Day 5: Highlights But then KL Rahul summoned the stillness of another era, and Shubman Gill stepped into the shoes of the great No. 4s he had quietly followed. Once they were done, Jadeja (107*) and Washington (100*) took India towards safety - and then helped seal the historic draw. What began as a rescue mission turned into a counterattack, and finally, into a quiet domination that left England stunned and spent.24 HOURS ON, INDIA TURN TABLESAt lunch the previous day, even Michael Atherton had given up on India. "We were checking train times home as we all felt India were a bit down and out at that point,' he admitted on Sky. 'Great respect to Gill and Rahul first of all for getting them through that initial crisis. Then it was over to Washington and Jadeja, who have taken it on terrific character from India.'If Gill and Rahul were the resistance, then Jadeja and Sundar were the renaissance. Together, they carried the fight deep into the final session, stringing together a 100-run stand that not only wiped out the deficit but pushed India into the lead, forcing England to chase ghosts in the fading fact, by the time the final hour began at Old Trafford, England were done. Literally and emotionally. Captain Ben Stokes walked up to the umpires, gestured that England had had enough. But the Indians weren't budging. Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar stood their ground. Both were in their 80s. Both in sight of hundreds. The draw was secure, but pride wasn't negotiable. They wanted to bat on."How long do you need? An hour?" shouted one of the England players, irritation crackling beneath the overcast skies. The pitch was flat. The tension wasn't. Stokes, visibly unimpressed, was going at the Indian pair. His team had thrown everything, and India had simply refused to yield. For a side that had trailed by 311 runs and stood at 0 for 2 in the first over of their second innings, the sheer audacity to dictate terms by the end of Day 5 was the stuff of folklore. This wasn't just a draw; it was a rebuke to the inevitability of defeat. It was the kind of day that keeps Test cricket KL SHOW CHARACTERadvertisementBut the journey to that moment was littered with bruises — both physical and mental. Shubman Gill's fourth century of the series came with the series on the line, the scoreboard reading 0 for 2, and Chris Woakes on a hat-trick. It was a captain's innings for the ages — constructed with poise, patience, and palpable had bowled 943 deliveries the previous day. Their bodies were heavy, legs sore, minds fraying. But Gill, carrying the pressure of expectation and his own uncertain form, found steel in adversity. Alongside KL Rahul, he staged a masterclass in restraint. Their 188-run partnership was not just about numbers. It was two men digging trenches and laying down the sandbags against an English playing his 50th Test, was elegance tempered by grit. His 90 off 230 balls was understated yet unshakeable — an innings that added to India's belief even without reaching three then, just before lunch, came the turning Archer, steaming in, got one to shape away. Gill, already struck on the glove and helmet, feathered one to Jamie Smith behind the stumps. The dam had cracked. India still trailed. England sensed their overs later, Stokes produced a delivery from around the wicket that skidded low and trapped Rahul plumb. Another surge of joy for England. Gill gone. Rahul gone. Pant padded up with a fractured toe. India's lower order thin. And yet, what followed was a masterclass in composure and WASHINGTON DIG DEEPEnter Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar. The draw was still a mountain away. India were 174/4 at lunch, still 88 runs behind. But the left-handed duo chose their battles with care and never blinked. England rotated bowlers. They changed ends. They adjusted fields. Nothing venom, Carse's zip, Woakes' probing lines, Root's teasing flight, Dawson's angles — none could breach the wall. There were edges that fell short, balls that beat the bat, lbw shouts turned down. But Jadeja and Sundar were batting not just with technique but with time. They survived. They then they began to push. Sundar brought up his half-century with a six and a four. Jadeja got to his with a crisp boundary, taking India into the lead. That stroke — more symbolic than statistical — broke England's spirit. From a position of dominance, they were now chasing a side that had looked dead and buried just 24 hours came on after tea with a 7-2 leg-side field, hoping the rough outside off to the left-handers would do the trick. Stokes whispered plans into his ears. Everyone closed in. Jadeja stepped out and launched him over mid-wicket. Then drilled him straight down the ground. The plan was shredded. Stokes rotated Dawson, switching him back over the wicket. Jadeja just smiled. It wasn't cocky. It was quiet defiance. Dawson had a long chat with his captain. England were out of ideas. They had all the overs, all the weapons. But none of the Ben Stokes kept soldiering on. Not fit to bowl on Day 4, he sent down eight overs on Day 5 despite obvious pain in his shoulder and hamstring. Grimacing after each ball, he still hit the pitch hard, one delivery even smashing into Gill's thumb and helmet. It was raw. It was brave. But it wasn't spell was a mirror to India's character — gritty, unrelenting, unwilling to bow down to limitations. But while Stokes could not tilt the scales alone, India found allies in each and Jadeja closed out a wicketless final session. The last hour was drama in slow motion. England were waiting for India to call it off. India didn't. The batters stayed out. The scoreboard moved. England's frustrations simmered. But there was no handshake when the last over was done did the players trudge off. No victors, but plenty of the end, this wasn't a game that needed a needed a story. And India gave it were two down in the first over. Pant was injured. Their bowlers had nothing left. Their captain was battered. And yet they batted. For 131 overs. They batted through the fire.A draw, yes. But one forged like a Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy remains alive. So does the beauty of Test cricket.- EndsTune In
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First Post
2 hours ago
- First Post
Tables turn on Day 5 at Old Trafford as India decline England's offer for draw after heroic batting
England captain Ben Stokes had walked up to Indian all-rounders Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar offering a draw ahead of the start of the final hour on Day 5 in Manchester. The two Indians, however, turned it down, much to the dismay of the hosts. read more Ravindra Jadeja and Ben Stokes in an animated chat during Day 5 of the fourth Test between India and England in Manchester. Image credit: Screengrab/JioHotstar Team India made an emphatic statement on the final day of the fourth Test against England in Manchester with Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar rejecting the offer of a draw from opposition skipper Ben Stokes. The incident took place at the start of the final hour on Day 5, at which point India's score read 386/4 in 138 overs with Jadeja and Sundar batting on 89 and 80 respectively. The two spin-bowling all-rounders were approaching their centuries, and understandably turned down Stokes' offer. However, India's decision to bat on wasn't greatly appreciated by the home team, with Stokes and the rest of the Englishmen seen having an animated chat with 'Jaddu' before the start of the 139th over. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD More to follow