
Harry Brook century before dramatic dismissal takes England in sight of win
A demoralised India were on the verge of throwing in the towel when Brook swung so hard looking for a third successive boundary off Akash Deep that he sent his bat spiralling in the air as a simple catch looped to mid-off.
Akash Deep breaks the partnership at last!
What a knock from Harry Brook, 111 from 98 deliveries 👏 pic.twitter.com/wuqJUYDKWv
— Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) August 3, 2025
He departed for 111 but Root was looking imperious as he reached the break on 98 not out alongside Jacob Bethell. Another 57 runs will seal a 3-1 home win and ensure the newly-minted Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy heads to Lord's.
Mohammed Siraj botched a chance to change the course of the match when Brook skied a catch to fine-leg with just 19 to his name but, although he held the chance, the seamer stepped on the boundary then carried the ball over for six.
England fans celebrated deliriously as a stunned Siraj realised what he had done, while Brook never looked back. He completed his 10th Test hundred in just 91 balls, his first in a fourth-innings pursuit, and hit the lion's share in a stand of 195.
Should the hosts get over the line it will complete a hat-trick of stunning pursuits against India in the past three years, following their record 378 for three at Edgbaston in 2022 and 373 for five at Headingley in the first match of this series.
They would also set a massive new record chase at Surrey's home, smashing the previous best of 263 set in 1902.
Siraj had snatched the momentum with the last act on Saturday evening, bowling Zak Crawley with a clinical yorker, India made a promising start by removing Ben Duckett (54) and Ollie Pope (27) in the morning session.
Duckett converted his overnight 34 into a fourth half-century of the series but played and missed repeatedly as he struggled against Siraj, finally nicking Prasidh Krishna to second slip.
Krishna, gamely filling the considerable boots of the rested Jasprit Bumrah, came desperately close to pinning Root lbw for just three but saw his huge appeal rejected. Ball-tracking showed it was clipping leg stump, but it would not have been enough to overturn the decision.
After an hour's play England had scraped together 37 runs, briefly accelerating as Pope hit three fours in an over off Krishna including one classy on-drive.
But that was the end of a cameo rather than the start of something more substantial, Siraj charging in and nailing him in front of the stumps.
At 106 for three, India had taken control but the arrival of Brook brought a screeching gear shift. He went for all-out aggression, at one stage lashing 27 runs in eight balls.
That included a crunch through midwicket and a lavish six over cover off Deep before his near miss at fine-leg, risking his wicket but picking up six more for his efforts. Siraj looked mortified, with the English fans revelling in his anguish. Krishna, meanwhile, had to quietly shelve the celebrations he had already started to perform.
The wheels fell off India's wagon in the afternoon, as a combination of defensive fields, passive captaincy and tired bodies left them short of answers. Brook and Root ruthlessly milked the situation, scoring a steady stream of ones and twos and waiting for the chance to hit fours.
A ragged full toss from Ravindra Jadeja and a woeful misfield from Deep, who kicked the ball over the ropes after declining to use his hands, suggested the game was up as the required runs dropped to double figures.
Brook looked to speed up after reaching a well-deserved hundred, lashing Deep for back-to-back fours before departing as his bat flew out of his hands.
Bethell was lucky to escape a caught-and-bowled on one, Deep slipping as he turned, but Root finished the session in full control as he moved within two of his century.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
13 minutes ago
- The Independent
Crystal Palace stun Liverpool to win Community Shield
Crystal Palace defeated Liverpool in the Community Shield, winning 3-2 on penalties after the match ended 2-2 at Wembley. Palace goalkeeper Dean Henderson was instrumental, saving two penalties from Alexis Mac Allister and Harvey Elliott in the shootout; Justin Devenny scored the decisive penalty for Crystal Palace. Liverpool's new signings Hugo Ekitike and Jeremie Frimpong scored on their competitive debuts, while Jean-Philippe Mateta and Ismaila Sarr netted for Crystal Palace. Palace appealed for a penalty after Sarr and Mac Allister both challenged for a ball in the air, but it was deemed no handball by the Argentinian, and the game ended in a stalemate. Before kick-off, tributes were paid to the late Liverpool forward Diogo Jota and his brother Andre Silva, though a minute's silence was cut short due to shouting from some Palace fans.


The Guardian
14 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Liverpool given reality check after summer transfers and tragedy
Wembley was supposed to be a case of the men who weren't there. It ended up asking questions of the team asked to defend the Premier League title. Alexander Isak may soon become a Liverpool player. That will be decided soon enough by the transfer market; a game of charades is being played before money eventually dictates its conclusion. Modern football's eternal melodramas fade into significance when considering the player Isak could replace as a Liverpool centre-forward. The club plays under the shadow of the loss of Diogo Jota, his death alongside his brother André Silva on a Spanish highway, its shattering of family and friends a reminder football is played by real people with real lives. Liverpool's pre-match lineup did not feature a No 20, Jota's number retired. The season ahead will be played in the memory of a popular, skilled yet understated professional, 12 months ago at Ipswich the scorer of the first Premier League goal of Arne Slot's reign. Jota died a champion, a beloved teammate. Before kick-off, Wembley was supposed to drop to a minute's silence, only for an idiot fringe of Crystal Palace's fans to shame themselves by chanting. A tiny minority though enough for a booed response from Liverpool fans, referee Chris Kavanagh blowing his whistle quickly. What should have been a moment of perspective was sullied. Football's ability to crack on blithely in the face of tragedy is one of its worst qualities. The Palace contingent, 99% of whom had been observant, wanted to get their own message across. 'Uefa mafia' declared a banner, highlighted by burning pyro. Palace's summer of FA Cup celebration is still overshadowed by the legal wrangle over their European participation – the outcome of the club's appeal due to be announced on Monday – while Uefa and Nottingham Forest principal Evangelos Marinakis had names taken in vain in a lengthy chorus of disdain. The show rolled inexorably on, Wembley offering a snapshot of a new Liverpool. Whether Jota would have been part of the sporting director Richard Hughes' plans to overhaul the squad Jürgen Klopp left last year for Slot is for the birds but it was Hugo Ekitiké, part of the overhaul, who scored first. As a central striker, Ekitiké looked much like the real deal should Isak not arrive. A player denied a chance to shine as Paris Saint-Germain turned to galacticos laid his marker, though rued a couple of misses. Florian Wirtz added grace and magic, all drops of the shoulder and accelerations, sometimes strolling, sometimes darting, carrying the haughty, aristocratic air of the very best German footballers. Liverpool became champions last season by their consistency, patiently taking the steam from opponents. Pre-season and Wembley suggest a more open-house approach, with attendant vulnerabilities. Amid the sound and fury of an occasion played at near-full pelt by both teams, the problems of Liverpool turning the dial up to 11 on attack were soon apparent. Jeremie Frimpong is not Trent Alexander-Arnold as an attacking full-back breaking behind the lines rather than passing beyond them. His goal was almost certainly inadvertent, but showed the dimensions he might add. That he scored on the 20 minutes and 20 seconds mark, as Liverpool fans remembered Jota, showed off perfect timing, too. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion That Eberechi Eze, drifting inside left, had Frimpong's defensive measure was just one problem. Liverpool's other Dutch defender, Virgil van Dijk, was unusually clumsy in bringing down Ismaïla Sarr for a penalty, flat-footed on other occasions. The return of another Dutchman, Ryan Gravenberch, on paternity leave, or Alexis Mac Allister, short of fitness to start, may solve such issues but there was top-heaviness, imbalance. Opposing scouts will have noticed the lack of cover Mohamed Salah provided to Frimpong, as often the case for Alexander-Arnold. The Egyptian king's creative partnership with Wirtz needs working on, too. There was a fault on the line between them, Salah reduced to one effort on goal, sometimes enough but not here, and dragged into Dean Henderson's hands. The less said about his shootout penalty the better. If Milos Kerkez was ever keen to overlap, Sarr's running showed he can be exposed defensively, and the out-of-position Hungarian was at fault as his tormentor scored Palace's second equaliser. Perhaps a £150m forward is not the answer Slot is looking for. Marc Guéhi, a central defender Liverpool are linked with but maybe beyond their spending limits should Isak actually arrive, showed typical cool as Palace assumed control in the second half. Adam Wharton, a midfielder the elite should covet, found his forwards with his passing range. Oliver Glasner has barely been able to add to his squad during the summer's limbo but the Austrian's golden touch continued as Palace edged a nerve-filled shootout to celebrate another trophy win. For Liverpool, losing the Community Shield cannot come remotely close to the genuine, human loss of the friend and teammate their squad must play on without. Wembley suggested reclaiming the glory enjoyed when Jota was among them may not be as easy as a summer of transfer fantasy had made it seem.


Reuters
14 minutes ago
- Reuters
Liverpool need to tighten up defensively, Slot says after Community Shield loss
LONDON, Aug 10 (Reuters) - Liverpool have conceded too many goals in pre-season and need to adapt defensively when they begin their Premier League title defence, manager Arne Slot said on Sunday after his side lost the Community Shield to Crystal Palace. The Reds have splashed the cash this summer, signing playmaker Florian Wirtz, plus forward Hugo Ekitike and attacking full-backs Jeremie Frimpong and Milos Kerkez, though key players have also departed. After winning the league in Slot's first term with only Federico Chiesa added to the squad left by former boss Juergen Klopp, Liverpool fans' expectations for the coming season have been buoyed by the uncharacteristic transfer spree. The new-look side has started brightly, with Liverpool scoring 20 goals in six pre-season friendlies and looking fluent at times against Palace, with Slot saying his side "are able to create more and we are more comfortable on the ball". But after conceding two goals to Palace, having shipped eight in their last four warm-up games, Slot expressed concern that Liverpool's improved attack may have come at a price. "Last season we had a lot of ball possession but that didn't always lead to promising situations," Slot said after they were beaten 3-2 on penalties following a 2-2 draw with Palace. "Now we are better in creating and getting promising situations than we were, in my opinion, throughout the whole last season. "But the other side is also true ... and what made us really strong last season was we only won mostly (by) a margin of one goal and that had mostly to do with us keeping a clean sheet or as a maximum conceding one goal." He added: "It needs maybe a little bit of adjustment defensively at the moment because we don't concede a lot of chances, but we do concede goals at the moment." Slot was nonetheless confident Liverpool could integrate their new signings, adding that "sometimes you need some time either to adapt offensively (or) to adapt defensively". Liverpool start their Premier League campaign against Bournemouth at Anfield on Friday.