
India And England Combine To Make First Innings History At Leeds After 70 Years
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India and England made history at Headingley, both scoring over 450 in the first innings.
India and England combined to make history as both scored first innings totals over 450 runs each, something that has not been done at Headingley in the last 70 years.
The last time the feat was achieved was in 2006 when Pakistan made 538 after England posted 515. The hosts won that game by 167 runs.
On Sunday, in the first test of the five-match series, Harry Brook narrowly missed a fairytale century on his home ground, getting out for 99, as England capitalised on India's fielding errors before being dismissed for 465.
Resuming at 209-3 in response to India's 471 all out, England suffered an early setback when overnight centurion Ollie Pope fell for 106. Brook was dismissed in the second session, attempting to reach his century with a six.
Brook had settled in well, hitting 11 boundaries, and made India pay for dropped catches by scoring his 12th test half-century. He was given a third lifeline when Yashasvi Jaiswal at fourth slip dropped a wide ball—his third missed catch, and India's fifth of the innings.
The Yorkshire-born batsman seemed poised for a big score until his heartbreaking dismissal came. He tried to reach three figures with a flourish, lofting Prasidh Krishna over fine leg, only to be caught by Shardul Thakur at the boundary.
A dejected Brook threw his head back and covered his face before walking back to the pavilion, as the Headingley crowd gave him a standing ovation despite their disappointment.
Krishna also dismissed Pope with a shorter delivery that he nicked to Rishabh Pant behind the stumps, adding only six runs to his overnight score.
A windy day, which began with a tribute to former England speedster David 'Syd" Lawrence, who died at 61, threatened to frustrate India when Ben Stokes hit Mohammed Siraj down the ground to bring up England's 250.
India were unhappy with the shape of the old ball, as highlighted when Pant threw it to the ground during a conversation with umpire Paul Reiffel after Brook charged Siraj and guided one over the slips.
The tourists persevered, and captain Stokes was furious with himself when he fell for 20, edging Siraj, while Jamie Smith successfully reviewed an initial lbw decision off Thakur.
Smith and Brook then formed a 73-run partnership, with India struggling to contain the runs. Smith fell for 40, hooking a short delivery to deep square leg where Ravindra Jadeja caught it and passed it to Sai Sudharsan before stepping over the rope.
After Brook's dismissal, Chris Woakes and Brydon Carse built a 55-run partnership, frustrating the bowlers, until Carse was bowled by a Mohammed Siraj yorker.
With India growing desperate, captain Shubman Gill brought Jasprit Bumrah back into the attack. Bumrah completed a five-wicket haul by dismissing Woakes and Josh Tongue with deliveries that shattered the stumps.
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