
Brilliant Duckett ton steers England to exhilarating India win
LEEDS, England :A superb century from Ben Duckett helped steer England to a sensational five-wicket win in the first test against India after a thrilling day five on Tuesday, the hosts reaching a target of 371 - the 10th highest successful run chase in test history.
Having turned the match on its head at Headingley after India had been 430-3 in their first innings, England appeared to be cruising to a dramatic win as openers Duckett and Zak Crawley eased their side to lunch on 117-0 in their second innings.
Duckett continued his imperious form with another four through the covers to reach his sixth test hundred, before Crawley fell for 65, their 188-run partnership the second highest England opening fourth-innings stand in tests.
Two wickets in two balls - Duckett and Harry Brook - dragged India back into the enthralling contest and when Ben Stokes fell for 33 attempting an ambitious reverse sweep, England's hopes of victory lay precariously in the balance.
Joe Root's unbeaten 53 calmed the nerves around his home ground, with the former skipper and Jamie Smith, who hit a six to seal victory, seeing England home as India, having scored five centuries in the match, somehow contrived to start the five-test series in defeat.

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Straits Times
6 hours ago
- Straits Times
'Bazball with brains' – England's refined style could see them have year to remember
Cricket - International Test Match Series - First Test - England v India - Headingley Cricket Ground, Leeds, Britain - June 24, 2025 England's Joe Root and Jamie Smith celebrate winning the match Action Images via Reuters/Ed Sykes TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY REUTERS 'Bazball with brains' – England's refined style could see them have year to remember LEEDS, England - England's ultra-aggressive approach has brought plenty of highs and also drawn criticism for some self-inflicted lows, but their thrilling win over India showed a refined version of 'Bazball' that could produce a year to remember. When coach Brendon McCullum teamed up with bit-hitting skipper Ben Stokes, the term 'Bazball' quickly became a staple in cricket vernacular, as the normally conservative English test arena was treated to a new, rip-roaring style. A team who had won one of their previous 17 test matches not only enjoyed a massive uplift in results, the manner of their victories came about thanks to a rapid run rate not previously seen in test cricket. Criticism came when their aggressive approach was seen as too cavalier, especially during last year's Ashes series where they were the better side in many matches but ended up drawing the series. Skipper Stokes hinted prior to the highly-anticipated test series with India that his team would refine their approach slightly, to become "smarter" in certain situations. After an exhilarating five-wicket victory over India in the first test, achieved by the 10th highest successful run chase in history, a controlled England backed up their skipper's promises. A performance former captain Michael Vaughan labelled "Bazball with brains" ensured a crucial period got off to the perfect start ahead of 10 tests, with the Ashes series in Australia to come next, which could define the McCullum-Stokes era. "Everyone who went out there and got runs read the situation," Stokes told reporters after England's Headingley win. "We chose our moments to actually put pressure back on them. We could see, in moments where the game could swing, that we needed to assess and hold off on that pressure. "Winning any test match is a lot of hard work, but to start a series off with a victory in the way that we've done it here, is very satisfying." England produced two of their top 10 highest successful run chases in their entire history during McCullum and Stokes' first series together against New Zealand, but in altogether different style, smashing their way to victory at around five and a half runs per over each time. Then, a few months later, England chased down 378 against India at Edgbaston, the only higher run chase than the one they have just accomplished in Leeds, in another exhilarating display of 'Bazball' hitting. A draw was never in England's view coming into day five on Tuesday. McCullum and Stokes have only drawn once in 24 tests, and that was due to rain. What they did not do, however, was go at as rapid a rate as before. Crawley and Duckett took 99 balls to bring up their opening 50 partnership -- the longest it has taken the pair to do so for England. The openers did up the ante after lunch as Duckett reached his sublime century, but there was no throwing caution to the wind. The risky reverse sweeps still came out with regularity later on, while the boundaries still flowed: England even clinched victory with back-to-back sixes. It was just toned down enough to ensure going that step too far, against elite opposition, could be somewhat tempered. "The conversations have been tweaked a little bit about being a little bit more clinical and winning more games certainly," Crawley told Sky Sports. "There's been certain times in the last few years maybe where we've thrown away winning positions and that's what we're trying to just tweak a little bit now, be a fraction more clinical." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


CNA
6 hours ago
- CNA
'Bazball with brains' – England's refined style could see them have year to remember
LEEDS, England :England's ultra-aggressive approach has brought plenty of highs and also drawn criticism for some self-inflicted lows, but their thrilling win over India showed a refined version of 'Bazball' that could produce a year to remember. When coach Brendon McCullum teamed up with bit-hitting skipper Ben Stokes, the term 'Bazball' quickly became a staple in cricket vernacular, as the normally conservative English test arena was treated to a new, rip-roaring style. A team who had won one of their previous 17 test matches not only enjoyed a massive uplift in results, the manner of their victories came about thanks to a rapid run rate not previously seen in test cricket. Criticism came when their aggressive approach was seen as too cavalier, especially during last year's Ashes series where they were the better side in many matches but ended up drawing the series. Skipper Stokes hinted prior to the highly-anticipated test series with India that his team would refine their approach slightly, to become "smarter" in certain situations. After an exhilarating five-wicket victory over India in the first test, achieved by the 10th highest successful run chase in history, a controlled England backed up their skipper's promises. A performance former captain Michael Vaughan labelled "Bazball with brains" ensured a crucial period got off to the perfect start ahead of 10 tests, with the Ashes series in Australia to come next, which could define the McCullum-Stokes era. "Everyone who went out there and got runs read the situation," Stokes told reporters after England's Headingley win. "We chose our moments to actually put pressure back on them. We could see, in moments where the game could swing, that we needed to assess and hold off on that pressure. "Winning any test match is a lot of hard work, but to start a series off with a victory in the way that we've done it here, is very satisfying." England produced two of their top 10 highest successful run chases in their entire history during McCullum and Stokes' first series together against New Zealand, but in altogether different style, smashing their way to victory at around five and a half runs per over each time. Then, a few months later, England chased down 378 against India at Edgbaston, the only higher run chase than the one they have just accomplished in Leeds, in another exhilarating display of 'Bazball' hitting. A draw was never in England's view coming into day five on Tuesday. McCullum and Stokes have only drawn once in 24 tests, and that was due to rain. What they did not do, however, was go at as rapid a rate as before. Crawley and Duckett took 99 balls to bring up their opening 50 partnership - the longest it has taken the pair to do so for England. The openers did up the ante after lunch as Duckett reached his sublime century, but there was no throwing caution to the wind. The risky reverse sweeps still came out with regularity later on, while the boundaries still flowed: England even clinched victory with back-to-back sixes. It was just toned down enough to ensure going that step too far, against elite opposition, could be somewhat tempered. "The conversations have been tweaked a little bit about being a little bit more clinical and winning more games certainly," Crawley told Sky Sports.


CNA
9 hours ago
- CNA
Brilliant Duckett ton steers England to exhilarating India win
LEEDS, England :A superb century from Ben Duckett helped steer England to a sensational five-wicket win in the first test against India after a thrilling day five on Tuesday, the hosts reaching a target of 371 - the 10th highest successful run chase in test history. Having turned the match on its head at Headingley after India had been 430-3 in their first innings, England appeared to be cruising to a dramatic win as openers Duckett and Zak Crawley eased their side to lunch on 117-0 in their second innings. Duckett continued his imperious form with another four through the covers to reach his sixth test hundred, before Crawley fell for 65, their 188-run partnership the second highest England opening fourth-innings stand in tests. Two wickets in two balls - Duckett and Harry Brook - dragged India back into the enthralling contest and when Ben Stokes fell for 33 attempting an ambitious reverse sweep, England's hopes of victory lay precariously in the balance. Joe Root's unbeaten 53 calmed the nerves around his home ground, with the former skipper and Jamie Smith, who hit a six to seal victory, seeing England home as India, having scored five centuries in the match, somehow contrived to start the five-test series in defeat.