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Mint
13 minutes ago
- Mint
‘Is it too late to call Virat back?' Tharoor's emotional plea as India crumbles in Fifth Test match against England
As the Fifth Test enters its fifth day with England needing 35 runs with four wickets in hand after the fourth day was delayed by rain, Congress MP Shashi Tharoor stated that he missed Virat Kohli during this series, "but never as much as in this Test match" and questioned "Is it too late to call him out of retirement?" Despite having England at 106/3 at one point while defending 374, India let the match slip away following a counter-attacking stand by Joe Root and Harry Brook as they scored centuries. With the action heading to day five with 35 runs and three/four wickets (depending on Chris Woakes' availability for batting), either India could walk out with their heads held high following a series loss or succumb to a 1-3 series loss, putting question marks over Shubman Gill's captaincy and Gautam Gambhir's reign as a head coach. Ahead of the England series, Virat had announced his retirement from Test cricket back in May, putting an end to what was a memorable 14-year career. Virat by far, was India's most successful captain in England, winning three matches here, most by any Indian captain, losing five and drawing one. Speaking on X, Tharoor said, "I've been missing @imVkohli a few times during this series, but never as much as in this Test match. His grit and intensity, his inspirational presence in the field, not to mention his abundant batting skills, might have led to a different outcome. Is it too late to call him out if retirement? Virat, the nation needs you! #INDvsENG." In his Test career, the 36-year-old made 123 appearances in white clothing, scoring 9,230 runs at an average of 46.85, with 30 centuries and 31 fifties in 210 innings and the best score of 254*. He is India's fourth-highest run-getter in the format, behind Sachin Tendulkar (15,921 runs), Rahul Dravid (13,265 runs) and Sunil Gavaskar (10,122 runs). Between 2016 to 2019, Virat had one of the strongest batting primes ever for a Test cricketer, piling up 4,208 runs in 43 Tests at an average of 66.79, with 16 centuries and 10 fifties in 69 innings and a best score of 254*. This also included seven double centuries, most by a captain in Test cricket history. However, the 2020s had not been great for the superstar batter, having made just 2,028 runs in 39 Tests at an underwhelming average of 30.72, with just three centuries and nine fifties to show in 69 innings. His numbers received a boost from a fine 2023, where he made 671 runs in eight Tests at an average of 55.91, with two centuries and two fifties in 12 innings. With 40 wins, 17 losses and 11 draws, Virat was India's most successful Test captain, having notable wins in South Africa, England and Australia. He won a series in Australia as well, becoming the first captain to do so in 2019. Across South Africa, England, New Zealand and Australia (SENA), Virat won seven Tests, the most by any Indian skipper. Coming to the Test match, England ended the first session of day four at 164/3, needing 210 runs to win, with Harry Brook (38*) and Joe Root (23*) unbeaten. After England opted to bat first, they reduced India to 153/6. A 58-run partnership between Karun Nair (57 in 109 balls, with eight fours) and Washington Sundar (26 in 55 balls, with three fours) was the most meaningful part of the inning as India was bundled out for 224 runs. Apart from Gus Atkinson's five-wicket haul, Josh Tongue (3/57) was also good. In the second innings, four-fers from Siraj (4/83) and Prasidh Krishna (4/62) reduced England to 247, despite a 92-run opening stand between Zak Crawley (64 in 57 balls, with 14 fours) and Ben Duckett (43 in 38 balls, with five fours and two sixes). They led by 23 runs. In India's second innings, key contributions came from Yashasvi Jaiswal (118 in 164 balls, with 14 fours and two sixes), Akash Deep (66 in 94 balls, with 12 fours), Ravindra Jadeja (53 in 77 balls, with five fours) and Washington Sundar (53 in 46 balls, with four boundaries and four sixes). They all took India to 396 runs, giving them a 373-run lead and setting a target of 374 runs for England to win the series. At the end of day four's play, England was 339/6, with Jamie Overton (0*) and Jamie Smith (2*) unbeaten. England still need 35 runs to win, with uncertainty over Chris Woakes coming to bat or not after a shoulder injury. Wickets from Akash Deep and Prasidh Krishna towards the end and a relentless spell from Mohammed Siraj towards the end of the session give India fans some hope that India will make the Three Lions toil really hard for these remaining runs.


Mint
13 minutes ago
- Mint
Amazon Music strikes a new chord with podcasts, Prime and Alexa to stand apart
Audio streaming business continues to struggle in India, as most platforms offer similar music catalogues, lacking in novelty or innovation and failing to drive subscriptions. Amid a sea of soundalike tracks, Amazon Music is striking a new chord to soar above the noise. It is following a three-pronged approach to stay more relevant than the others. It is offering a completely ad-free experience that doesn't charge customers separately and is part of the Amazon Prime bundle along with video and shopping, a top company official said. It is also producing a range of exclusive podcasts and video content with artistes in addition to songs. And finally, it aims to benefit from the Amazon consumer tech ecosystem, including Fire TVs and Alexa devices that can help improve the listening experience. 'For us, the differentiation (from other players) comes from the fact that we are an ad-free, on-demand product. We're not charging customers separately because it's all within the Prime bundle," Rishabh Gupta, country head, Amazon Music India, said in an interview. 'On the content side, we do a lot of exclusive podcasts and bring fans closer to artistes via video IPs (intellectual properties)." As far as local languages go, the platform hosts content in 20-plus languages, with Hindi, English, Tamil, Telugu and Punjabi forming the top five, Gupta added. On the Android app, the user interface supports nine languages. The platform that has seen engagement surge since the pandemic. Gupta said that podcast customer listening hours are up 22% over 2024. While Hindi remains its most streamed language with an 84% customer spread, followed by English and Punjabi at 63%, Tamil and Telugu are witnessing strong growth, too, driven by curated regional playlists and improved discovery features. Gupta said the service is fully committed to being seen as a part of the Prime bundle and has witnessed great traction among consumers, in turn, helping the Prime program (including video and shopping) significantly. 'People who use multiple benefits have been some of our longest-serving Prime customers," Gupta added. As a DSP (distribution service provider), Gupta said the platform doesn't necessarily dictate as to what content needs to be produced. However, besides the music catalogue that comes via acquisitions from both from the film and non-film genres, Amazon Music is creating some of its own video and editorial IPs. This shoulder content, ranging from 2 to 20-minute videos, touches upon themes like what may be going on in an artiste's mind before going on stage at a concert, and so on. Further, while the platform is open to all kinds of podcasts, it targets some exclusive and early access deals as well. Podcast content now makes up approximately 15% of total user engagement on the platform. To be sure, the audio business in India, across regions and languages, is facing its share of challenges. Film producers, independent artistes and music labels are grappling with the shutdown of multiple streaming platforms, including Airtel's Wynk, ByteDance's Resso and Hungama Music, which failed to crack the paid subscription model. Others, such as Spotify, have halved per-stream payouts. Despite a rich musical heritage and wide consumption across the country, the Indian music segment declined by 2% to ₹5,300 crore in 2024, according to the annual Ficci EY media and entertainment report. Digital revenue, the biggest chunk of the segment, fell from 68% of total revenue in 2023 to 62.4% last year. The Indian music industry recorded 192 million free streamers in 2024, as compared to 12 million paid streamers, reaffirming that platforms have been forced to depend heavily on advertising revenue. However, Gupta is optimistic. 'India is an evolving country and a growing market for all kinds of businesses, including music, which is currently at the centre stage of the art and culture landscape. The space is constantly evolving with developments in technology and marketing, not to mention a continuous endeavour to grow bigger and better," Gupta said. 'As a country, we've advanced exponentially—just see how easy it is to make digital payments today and compare it to how it was three to four years back when we were all cash dependent. And while this has nothing to do with the music industry, it has aided the subscription economy, not just for the music industry, but for video-on-demand and everything else. So, every few years we see a new addition, mostly a better one, to the existing norms and processes that suddenly drive some sort of hockey stick growth for the industry, and I think for music, it's probably just around the corner," he added.


India Today
25 minutes ago
- India Today
Final day, final Test: England need 35, India 4 wickets and 4 results possible
Day Four at The Oval ended as so many have in this absorbing series — under dark skies, on a damp outfield, and with tension thick in the air. England need just 35 more runs. India require four wickets. And the final day of this epic five-match saga promises the rarest of spectacles: a Test match with all four results still for England remains the likeliest outcome. An Indian win — improbable, but not implausible. A draw, should rain have its say. And a tie? In a series that has routinely mocked predictions, nothing can be ruled captivating contest will now stretch into a 25th and final day — a fitting finale to a summer defined by bold batting, relentless pace, and emotional resilience. For much of Sunday, England appeared in control. Centuries from Harry Brook and Joe Root powered them towards their daunting target of 374 with unnerving calm. At 317 for four at tea, the game seemed to be slipping away from India. Oval Test, Day 4 Highlights | Full ScorecardBut, in a twist this series seems to script on demand, the door creaked open again. Prasidh Krishna, steaming in with the second new ball approaching, removed Jacob Bethell and Root in quick succession. Suddenly, the equation looked far more delicate: 339 for six, light fading, and Chris Woakes potentially unavailable to bat due to a shoulder bad light — and eventually rain — forced an early close, India had clawed back momentum. The fielders had found their voice again. Siraj was charging in like a man possessed. The new ball is just 3.4 overs away, and the pitch — softened by the heavy roller and summer wear — may yet hold and Root: Different gears, same impactEarlier in the day, Brook and Root dismantled India's attack in contrasting styles but with equal effectiveness. Brook, dropped on 19 when Siraj stepped on the rope, made the most of the reprieve — crashing Akash Deep for six and unfurling a flurry of boundaries. His second century of the series came off just 91 balls, an innings of audacity and perfect ever the craftsman, anchored the innings with poise and precision. His 39th Test hundred — and 13th against India — was built with trademark elegance. Upon reaching the milestone, he offered a moving tribute to his former coach and mentor, Graham Thorpe, raising both his bat and headband to the innings ended as dramatically as it began — a flying bat, a mistimed lofted drive, and a straightforward catch at mid-off. Root fell soon after, edging behind as the ball began to talk again. It was the kind of double-strike that shifts not just momentum, but mood — in the middle and in the dressing LEADS INDIA'S SPIRITED FIGHTBACKadvertisementThe day began with India desperate for early inroads. England, resuming at 50 for one, looked settled. But Prasidh Krishna struck early, drawing a loose drive from Ben Duckett who edged to KL Rahul at slip. Mohammed Siraj, tireless as ever, followed with a sharp nip-backer that trapped Ollie Pope in front. It was Siraj's second dismissal of Pope in the match and his 20th wicket of the series, confirming his place as the leading had a brief opening. But England's No. 3 and No. 5 closed it swiftly, adding 195 runs in just over 35 overs. The spinners - Washington Sundar and Ravindra Jadeja - couldn't find rhythm or control, allowing the game to drift the final session, Siraj and Prasidh returned for one last spell - and the tide began to reverse swing in play, the ball started to behave unpredictably. England's scoring rate dipped, the crowd grew restless, and India saw a chance. Both quicks dug deep, sending down testing overs late in the day. Prasidh had bowled 22.2 overs, Siraj 26. Yet neither showed signs of letting was Prasidh who cracked the door open. Despite conceding runs earlier, he kept believing. Jacob Bethell's rash stroke handed India a way back. Prasidh backed it up with a sharp two-over spell, beating the bat and drawing tentative pushes from the fed off the energy. Fired up at the other end, he kept up the pressure and was rewarded when Joe Root edged behind, undone by a lapse in focus. The Indian supporters roared their approval. The mood had written off just an hour earlier, were suddenly back in it. The pair's resilience and refusal to back down gave India a glimmer - and perhaps more - heading into the final roller vs fresh legs: The Day 5 equationEngland will resume with Jamie Overton and Jamie Smith at the crease, likely to call for the heavy roller once again to settle the surface and ease the final stretch of their chase. But after India's spirited fightback late on Sunday evening, the momentum may have ever so slightly shifted in favour of the pacers bowled with ferocity and heart, rotating through punishing spells. Prasidh Krishna sent down 22.2 overs in the innings; Mohammed Siraj, the tireless spearhead, delivered 26. When shoulders had begun to drop, Siraj and Krishna found another gear, igniting the Oval evening with a burst of hostile, inspired fast bowling that cracked the game running on fumes, gave everything in the final session before rain halted play. Already having bowled a demanding eight-over spell, he returned after Jacob Bethell's dismissal to attack Joe Root's pads with venomous nip-backers. The fielders came alive, rallying behind every shout and half-chance. Prasidh, too, found late rhythm, inducing false strokes and rattling England's lower order as shadows pace battery, having emptied their tanks, will welcome the overnight break before making one final has been the pattern all series: just when one side has seemed to seize control, the other has clawed back-often from the very the interruption stall India's surge? Or has it arrived just in time to refuel their fast bowlers for one last heave? The final day holds the answers-and promises a finish to for Day Five: Nerves, clouds, and chaosThe weather could once again have its say. Morning conditions are expected to stay largely dry, but showers loom in the afternoon — particularly around 2 to 4 PM. Cloud cover, heavy from the start, may aid India's seamers as they hunt the final four meanwhile, will hope for calm skies and calmer heads — and for Smith and Overton to finish what Brook and Root nothing has come easy in this series. Every session has rewritten the script. Every breakthrough has shifted the tone. And now, with one last chapter to be written, the stakes could not be Tests. Twenty-five days. A thousand storylines. And just 35 runs — or four wickets — left to decide it happens, the Oval is ready. For the fifth time in five matches, this series will go down to the final day. And just like the others, it offers no easy answers — only theatre.- EndsTune InYou May Also Like