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England's Chris Woakes set to miss rest of Oval Test with left shoulder injury

England's Chris Woakes set to miss rest of Oval Test with left shoulder injury

Glasgow Times4 days ago
Woakes left the field with his arm in a makeshift sling late on the first evening after taking a painful tumble at the boundary edge.
He immediately looked in serious trouble and England have confirmed he is unlikely to play any further role in the game, with bat or ball.
Chris Woakes is currently off the field after sustaining a suspected shoulder injury while diving for the ball by the boundary.
Wishing you all the best, Woakesy 👊 pic.twitter.com/4Hhf0iZyIB
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 31, 2025
They have left some wriggle room by suggesting he will remain with the team for observation but it is hard to imagine the 36-year-old being pressed into action in anything short of an emergency.
A team spokesperson said: 'England seamer Chris Woakes will continue to be monitored throughout the remainder of the fifth Rothesay Test at the Kia Oval, following a left shoulder injury sustained on day one of the match against India.
'At this stage, the injury has ruled him out of any further participation in the Test. A further assessment will be conducted at the conclusion of the series.'
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Pantomime villain Mohammed Siraj deserved last laugh against England
Pantomime villain Mohammed Siraj deserved last laugh against England

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Pantomime villain Mohammed Siraj deserved last laugh against England

Test cricket is the cruellest sport: a game in which five days of toil, and 25 in a five-match series, can be decided by impossibly fine margins. But, just occasionally, Test matches get the denouement that they deserve. For Mohammed Siraj, justice came from the 1,113th ball that he bowled against England this series. With a pinpoint yorker, the fast bowler knocked out the base of Gus Atkinson's off stump. He wheeled away, spread his arms aloft in celebration before being engulfed by his team-mates. This pulsating series had the most-fitting ending: a six-run India victory, clinching a 2-2 draw. INDIA HAVE WON THE FIFTH TEST TO DRAW THE SERIES 2-2 😱 — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) August 4, 2025 If his captain, Shubman Gill, won India 's player of the series award, Siraj was scores ahead of anyone on either side as the most durable cricketer. A lethal cocktail of the intense schedule, flat pitches and an unusually unresponsive Dukes ball has made this series unforgiving for bowlers, stretching to every single allotted day. Jasprit Bumrah was only fit to play in three Tests, Ben Stokes in four. As Siraj charged in to deliver the final delivery of the series, the only other bowler to play in all five Tests, Chris Woakes, was at the non-striker's end, with his left arm in a sling. Siraj, cast as the pantomime villain for much of the series, outlasted them all. He had also willed himself to ignore what threatened to be his cruel fate this series: as least-deserving loser. On day four at the Oval, Siraj caught Harry Brook at fine leg, only for his right leg to clip the boundary edge. As Brook advanced from 19 to 111, Siraj received constant taunting from England's fans, reminding him of his drop. Harry Brook survives! 😱 Mohammed Siraj takes the catch but then stumbles over the boundary, it's a six! 😮 — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) August 3, 2025 As evident throughout his skirmishes with England's batsmen this series, Siraj's facial expressions do not suggest a natural poker player. His evident self-disgust after dropping Brook showed his fear that his error would determine the series result. Instead, he summoned all his desire to try and push the series towards a different denouement. Such desire is, perhaps, the abiding theme of Siraj's journey. The son of an auto-rickshaw driver, Siraj learnt the game playing in tennis-ball leagues in Hyderabad; the upbringing shaped his skinny style and full length. Siraj did not bowl with a hard ball until he was 20. A year later, he was representing his state. Siraj called upon this same desire in Australia in 2020, when selected for his first Test tour. During the grim years of the pandemic, Siraj's tour began with a 14-day quarantine period, able to leave their hotel rooms only for training. All of this, only to be a travelling reserve. Early in the tour, Siraj's father died. If he returned home to attend the funeral, he would not be able to return Down Under. But Siraj remembered his father's dream: to see him play Test cricket. The next day, he went to training again. 'Your father's dua [blessing] is with you,' Ravi Shastri, then India's head coach, told Siraj, as documented in the book The Miracle Makers. 'You'll end up with a five-wicket haul in this Test series.' After injuries granted Siraj his Test debut, Shastri's prediction came true in Brisbane. Siraj raised his hands aloft to salute his father. Never would his father have been prouder than at the Oval, as Siraj's sheer indestructibility led India to victory in one of the greatest Tests of the 21st century. Yet the adulation for Siraj's sheer zest for the fight, should not obscure his skill. Remarkable physical durability, allied to a spirit that refuses to be broken, can only take a fast bowler so far. Siraj's brilliance is to combine these with phenomenal skill: moving the ball both ways at speeds above 85mph, with an action that continually threatens the stumps. He has honed these qualities not just through his own relentless determination to improve, but also India's modern system: he played 16 first-class games for India A before his Test debut. Siraj is often lauded as Bumrah 's perfect foil. Yet his performances in this series have illustrated that he is not just a superb accompaniment for Bumrah, but also a worthy attack-leader in his place. Extraordinarily, India lost 2-0 in the Tests that Bumrah played, but won both games when he was rested. In the two Tests that Bumrah missed, at Edgbaston and the Oval, Siraj took 16 wickets. This continued a trend, of Siraj being better in Bumrah's absence. He now averages 35 in Tests alongside Bumrah, but just 25.1 when Bumrah is absent. After this pulsating hour at the Oval, Siraj is now the author of a moment that will continue to be replayed throughout India's Test history. Amid his euphoria Siraj rushed to claim a memento. Rarely has a stump been so well-deserved.

England 2-2 India: player ratings for the Test series
England 2-2 India: player ratings for the Test series

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

England 2-2 India: player ratings for the Test series

Ben Stokes: 304 runs at 43.4; 17 wickets at 25.2It is no exaggeration to say that a magnificent series like this is the product of how Baz McCullum and Ben Stokes have reinvented English Test cricket, a change comparable to Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque's revolution of European art a century ago. The England captain was back to his best as a bowler, moving the ball, finding bounce and going the extra miles. His batting suffered a little, but he signed off at Manchester with a century. His run out of Rishabh Pant at Lord's was brilliant in conception and execution, and turned a tight Test England's way. Most of all, his stamp on the team is so embedded that it seems impossible that England will play any differently in the foreseeable future. That brings a downside but the upside is good for England, good for the game and good for the fans. Just look at the faces in the crowd. Grade A Zak Crawley: 290 runs at 32.2; six catchesHe batted against type in the crucial opening stand of 188 at Headingley that launched England's extraordinary chase of 371 that won the first Test. Thereafter balls wide of off stump were boomed through extra cover or nicked off to slip, two more half-centuries added amid the inevitable disappointing scores. People have long made up their minds about the cost and benefit of his place in the team, so it's not interesting to rehash those arguments again. His catching in the cordon was unusually inconsistent, especially in the very tight fifth Test. Grade C Ben Duckett: 462 runs at 51.3; three catchesAs is the case with his partner, we know what to expect now: cuts, pulls and drives (but few leaves) to keep the scoreboard moving with the occasional turbo of boundaries boost to spin the tins even faster. He made 62 and 149 in the crucial win that set the series in motion and cashed in with 94 on the dead track at Old Trafford. Grade B+ Ollie Pope: 306 runs at 34.0; two catches Such are his technical issues that his innings have become painful to watch, the head, hands and feet seldom aligned and every ball looking like a potential stump smasher. He picked up his customary series century at Lord's – the man has heart – but you fear for what awaits in Australia. As captain, he delivered an epic Test match at the Oval, but it seemed that Joe Root and McCullum were, let's say, very active members of the leadership group. He looks like he needs a domestic summer to recalibrate his game. At 27, he has time on his side. Grade C Joe Root: 537 runs at 67.1; two wickets at 122.0; five catches There's not much left to say about Test cricket's second highest run scorer. His game, especially since handing over the captaincy to Stokes – one of the best decisions the ECB has ever made (no giggling at the back) – is so grooved that it's hard not to take it for granted. When he was out in the chase at the Oval, it felt like three wickets not one – when he does eventually put his bat away, it will feel like three batters have gone. Grade A Harry Brook: 481 runs at 53.4; no wicket for 55 runs; 11 catchesHe will infuriate those infuriated by Crawley for many of the same reasons, but it seems churlish to blame the man who gave England the chance of a spectacular series-sealing chase at the Oval for the crime of getting out on 111. The problem is that he's often so dominant at the crease that any dismissal feels like a wasted opportunity to score twice as many. Should we praise the two centuries, a 99 and another fifty or lament the sometimes wild shots that led to their termination? It seems clear that you don't have one without the other. His catching, though prolific, was fallible, crucially so in a tight series. Grade B+ Jacob Bethell: 11 runs at 5.5; no wicket for 17 runsDrafted in for the last Test, he looked like a promising youngster from the seconds given a chance for the firsts. He is 21 and he needs to play more first-class cricket before he's thrust into the cauldron of the Test arena again. To throw him to Cummins and co in Australia, would surely be unfair. Grade D- Jamie Smith: 434 runs at 62.0; 20 catches and one stumpingEvery time you looked up at Edgbaston, Smith seemed to be in vision: 234 overs keeping and 102 overs batting. His scores (40, 44*, 184*, 88, 51, eight, nine, eight and two) speak to a man being asked to do too much in too short a time. His keeping standing back also dropped off a little, though no keeper could have stopped some of the byes at the Oval. Standing up, he still has work to do. With James Rew having another fine season at Somerset (11 career centuries at 21 and a full-time keeper), England will soon have a decision to make about Smith. Will he stay as an ersatz Adam Gilchrist or be asked, after a bit of work on a tighter defence, to do a Kumar Sangakkara/McCullum and bat in the top order? Grade B+ Liam Dawson: 26 runs at 26.0; one wicket at 140.0He had a chance to capitalise on a dream recall after eight years out – and he blew it. He had a chance to take a critical catch as a substitute in the fifth Test – and he blew that too. Grade D- Chris Woakes: 64 runs at 10.6; 11 wickets at 52.2; two catchesHobbling, wincing but, as ever, giving everything for the team, he almost provided a fairytale ending to the series. In truth, this summer looked like one too many for the immensely likable Brummie, who lacked the zip and swing that once made him such a tricky proposition in England. His batting wasn't quite there either. He hit a typically handy 38 in the first Test but almost nothing after that. Although he gets a whole extra grade for that two he ran for Gus Atkinson. Grade C Jamie Overton: nine runs at 4.5; two wickets at 82.0; two catchesLike many a Surrey watcher, I'm not sure if he gets in the county champions' best XI, so it was a surprise to see him turning out for England. To be a threat at Test level, he needs to be at top pace and hitting the deck – in his one appearance, he wasn't. Grade D- Brydon Carse: 164 runs at 27.3; nine wickets at 60.9; one catchIn a batters' series, he kept running in hard and asking questions, but they were too usually too straightforward for the man 22 yards away. If he is to be more than a squad bowler, he needs to be closer to 90mph consistently or move the ball that little more to challenge top-order batters. His 56 at Lord's looks even better now than it did at the time. Grade C+ Gus Atkinson: 27 runs at 27.0; eight wickets at 20.0; one catchOne key benefit of a smooth action in which almost nothing can go wrong is repeatability and Atkinson simply picked up his Test career where he left it in May. Increasingly, he looks to have Glenn McGrath's relentless line – that half bat's width of movement and a sharp enough, short of a length delivery to keep the batters honest. He also brilliantly ran out Shubman Gill from what was little more than a quarter chance. He could do very well in Australia. Grade A- Jofra Archer: 11 runs at 11.0; nine wickets at 28.7; one catchArcher is back bowling, smiling and taking wickets. It was just like old times – the glide to the crease, the almost frictionless delivery, the 90mph showing on the big screen. Could he have been saved from the Old Trafford bowlers' graveyard and been unleashed at the Oval? Grade B+ Josh Tongue: 13 runs at 3.25; 19 wickets at 29.1; two catchesFor a big nasty quick, he has the goofiest of smiles – and he needs it when the ball is going here, there and everywhere. At the Oval, England lost the Test by six runs, but they lost the extras count by 64 v 34, many of which could be chalked up to Tongue. He bowled in six innings and only once went for less than four an over. But he does take wickets with the kind of deliveries that get set batters out. Grade C+ Shoaib Bashir: 16 runs at 8.0; 10 wickets at 54.1; one catchThe first of England's two injured heroes, his freak dismissal of Mohammed Siraj sent him off round St John's Wood showing more pace than he does at fine leg. His variations are improving, and his drift and dip are a genuine threat, but his greatest asset is Stokes' captaincy. This is his fourth series in a row in which he has averaged around the 50 mark; that's not sustainable. Grade C- Shubman Gill: 754 runs at 75.4; three catchesGill was imperious at the crease, wearing the considerable mantle of the India captain as if to the manner born. There were times, especially in his record-breaking knocks at Edgbaston, when it was hard to believe that anyone in history had batted with such easy grace. Even in the purplest of form, the cruel schedule ensured that he made only one score above 21 in his last six innings. As captain, he is largely undemonstrative, but could be riled to show the passion the fans, and, perhaps, his bowlers, demand. Talk of 'the line' is tedious, but I fully expected England's delaying tactics at Lord's and fully expected some comeback – I think everyone in the middle did too. He's clearly making his way in terms of tactical acumen in the field, but he has already developed a captain's greatest asset – bowlers who will run in and never give up. Grade A KL Rahul: 532 runs at 53.2; six catchesFinally settled into a role in the side, he plays the part of an old-school opener perfectly, binning the ego (not one of 1,066 deliveries was hit for six) and allowing others to play around him. That said, his elegance on the drive and cut shows his middle-order pedigree, but it's now carefully rationed out to mitigate risk. He loses half a grade for his part in the ridiculous, match-turning run out at Lord's – just wait for your hundred man. Grade B+ Yashasvi Jaiswal: 411 runs at 41.1; one catchWe only saw those gunslinger's fast hands early and late in the series, the impetuosity of youth seeing him off in-between times, the wide tempter just too tempting. But what a talent the 23-year-old is – the fast starts he provides are certain to reap rewards more often than not. Ruthlessly expelled from the slip cordon after a few drops, he was often seen shouting from the deep, a little forlorn, missing the limelight. Grade B Karun Nair: 205 runs at 25.6; four catchesLike Liam Dawson, another player brought back to Test cricket after a long absence in the hope that he could reproduce his domestic form. He didn't, but he didn't entirely fail in that tricky No 3 slot, before looking a little more comfortable at No 5 in the fifth Test. Grade C Sai Sudharsan: 104 runs at 23.3; two catchesHe alternated with Karun Nair in the middle order and, in a series of big bold statements, was even quieter at the crease, exemplified by spending two and a half hours over 38 in the fifth Test. He could, with some justification, point out that 91 of the first-innings 224 runs were scored during that stay and, without them, England would have won the series. Grade C Rishabh Pant: 479 runs at 68.4; seven catchesIf comically effective is permissible as a description, it's the right one for the effervescent wicketkeeper-batter who picked up two injuries in four Tests, yet was a key figure in each of them. His extraordinary mix of bravado and innovation brought twin tons in the first Test (which his side lost) and there were runs and laughs pretty much every time he walked (sometimes hobbled) to the crease. His wicketkeeping, especially standing up, is not back to its pre-car crash best, but Dhruv Jurel did a lot of that for him, so it didn't matter much. Grade A- Ravindra Jadeja: 516 runs at 86.0; seven wickets at 72.4; one catchThe elder statesman of the side is still the quickest in the field even after spending so much time batting. In at No 6, a notch or two higher than for most of his career, he batted like a specialist to out-average even his skipper, with one century and five fifties. They were smart runs too, balancing attack and defence as befitted the situation. Other players could learn a lot from watching his knocks back with a coach. He didn't take many wickets and couldn't he keep things as tight as his reputation demands, but this was no series for spinners. Grade A Nitish Kumar Reddy: 45 runs at 11.25; three wickets at 37.0His victims were Crawley (twice) and Duckett, so he certainly contributed with the ball even if his captain often appeared reluctant to bowl him. He never got going with the bat. He'll be back, though, as he looks like a typical English all-rounder. Grade C Dhruv Jurel: 53 runs at 26.5; three catches (and seven as sub wicketkeeper)It was a disjointed series for Pant's replacement. He showed glimpses of his class on both sides of the crease and didn't let his team down, but was given a very tricky hand to play. Grade C+ Shardul Thakur: 46 runs at 15.3; two wickets at 72.0; one catchAt 33, he's probably a little over the hill and has always lacked the class in either discipline an all-rounder needs. He looks likely to be overtaken by younger men very soon, if not already. Grade D+ Washington Sundar: 284 runs at 47.3; seven wickets at 38.6; one catchWe didn't know it at the time, but his extraordinary hitting, adding 39 for the 10th wicket, proved crucial in putting the fifth-Test target just out of reach for Root, Brook and co. He's a very classy batter and was the best spinner on show with drift a key weapon. At 25, more than 10 years younger than Jadeja, he looks an obvious replacement. Gill will have to be patient with his bowling, but there's every sign that India have found a gem. Grade B+ Akash Deep: 80 runs at 20.0; 13 wickets at 36.5; one catchHe took the wind-up merchant act a little too far with Duckett, but proved a very handy seamer who was suited to English conditions, with lateral movement at a decent pace. He had a lot of fun bowling at Edgbaston and batting at the Oval, his unexpected nightwatchman runs doing a Pant in changing the mood. Grade B Jasprit Bumrah: nine runs at 1.8; 14 wickets at 26.0; one catchEngland showed a lot of respect to India's unorthodox spearhead, with good reason. He was limited to three Tests due to injury and India won the two he sat out – a strange anomaly that seems to happen quite often in cricket. He opened his account with a five-fer in the first innings at Headingley, but was powerless to stop England's march to 371 in the second dig. Back after a break, he bagged another first-innings five-fer at Lord's, but could not not prevent England's second victory. Like his fellow bowlers, he was emasculated by the pitch in Manchester. Grade B Mohammed Siraj: 20 runs at 4.0; 23 wickets at 32.4; four catchesIt would be grotesquely patronising to describe Siraj as a 'trier' as he is a skilled bowler operating at close to 90mph with away swing and a wobble seam in-ducker in his arsenal. But in a series stuffed with batting records, injuries and worn out bowlers, he charged in like a madman (it's a great look) all day, every day, endearing himself to fans of both sides. Most of all, when his hour of resistance was concluded by the ball trickling back on to his stumps still 23 short of the target at Lord's, he reacted the way any of us would. When he stepped on the boundary while catching Brook at the Oval, he reacted the way any of us would. And when redemption presented itself after one last huge effort on the final morning, he reacted the way any of us would. He took four more wickets than any other bowler on either side and even wore a headband for Thorpey. This was an all-time great series in no small part due to the heart and soul of the son of a rickshaw driver. Well played Sir, well played. Grade A Prasidh Krishna: six runs at 2.0; 14 wickets at 37.1Aggressive with a wonderfully natural sneer he points at batters, the willowy right-armer is very sharp, if a little easier to line up than Bumrah. He picked up 14 wickets in his three Tests, a highly creditable return, including four in each innings in the pulsating fifth Test. He paid a price for them but these pitches were tilted so much in favour of the bat that everyone did. Grade B- Anshul Kamboj: no runs at 0; one wicket at 89.0Parachuted (unfairly) into the middle of the series to bowl on that dead Manchester patch of earth, he looked terrified at first, but did improve. He'll always have one Test wicket (Duckett), but he may not get another. Grade D+ This article is from The 99.94 Cricket Blog

Intensity of India series will help England in Ashes battle
Intensity of India series will help England in Ashes battle

South Wales Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Intensity of India series will help England in Ashes battle

McCullum was honest enough to chalk up the 2-2 scoreline as a 'fair reflection' on seven weeks of hard-fought, demanding cricket, with India snatching a share of the new Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy with a thrilling six-run win in the decider. That meant England were one big hit away from claiming an outright victory that would have sent them to Australia this winter with the biggest scalp of the 'Bazball' era. India win by 6 runs 💔 The Anderson Tendulkar trophy is shared 🤝 A simply incredible finale to an epic series 👏 — England Cricket (@englandcricket) August 4, 2025 Instead, they will travel having last defeated one of their 'big three' rivals back in Sir Alastair Cook's farewell series in 2018. McCullum will soon begin the job of assessing how and where things could have gone better, with the aim of landing in Perth at the start of November with lessons learned. 'It's been a magnificent series, as good as I've been involved with or witnessed in my time. We played some excellent cricket and at times, with the pressure India put us under, we came up a little bit short,' he said. 'You're always learning any time you get to see guys having to dig deep and go to places they've maybe not been before. 'We'll let this one sit and we'll digest it. We'll be able to pick out what has gone well then start to work out how we can keep improving, so when we do arrive out in Australia we give ourselves a huge chance. 'We're in the middle now, halfway through what we knew was going to be an unbelievable 12 months of Test cricket. We know we've got some room to improve. 'But to be involved in a series of such pressure over a period like this teaches you to be tough and builds resilience within you. A lot of our guys will have learnt a lot and that can only be a good thing.' One thing England may reflect on is their decision to keep the emerging talent of Jacob Bethell in camp for the most of the summer, rather than releasing him to play first-class cricket. He has played just one County Championship match for Warwickshire this year, while travelling as a non-playing squad member with the Test team. When he was called on as Ben Stokes' injury replacement, he made 11 runs in two innings and was dismissed in a pressurised chase playing a wild slog. McCullum refused to chide him for that, though. 'Beth will be back and better for the experience, I'm sure he'll learn from it,' he said. 'The good thing was he took the positive option. The thing people want to be seen to be doing is getting out to a ball in an acceptable manner, but sometimes you've got to be brave enough to be able to try and put some pressure back on the opposition. He got out doing it, but no one ever regretted being positive, right?' Bethell's flat performance means Ollie Pope can breathe a little easier about hanging on to his number-three spot in Australia. After starting the international season with successive hundreds – against Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge and India at Headingley – his numbers tailed off. He finished the series averaging 34 and sat a disappointing 10th on the run-scoring charts. 'There were too many 20s and a 40 in there. You always want more as a batter so it's frustrating that I didn't end up scoring more hundreds on some good surfaces,' said Pope. 'That's probably the difference between a really good series and a so-so series. I feel like I'm a much better player now than I was on my first Ashes trip (in 2020/21). 'Mentally, I'm more equipped to deal with the challenges out there and I know how I want to go about building innings out there. 'Before I felt like I was kind of trying to tinker too much during games, in between games, and probably wasn't quite ready for the challenge four years ago.'

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