logo
‘Nitish Reddy was the most vocal on Day 3', ‘chirpy' Washington stoked trouble as England met ‘fire with fire', say Buttler and Broad

‘Nitish Reddy was the most vocal on Day 3', ‘chirpy' Washington stoked trouble as England met ‘fire with fire', say Buttler and Broad

Indian Express16-07-2025
Former England pacer Stuart Broad and limited-overs wicket-keeper Jos Buttler felt that India all-rounder Nitish Kumar Reddy and Washington Sundar invited trouble with their on-field antics on days three and four during the Lord's Test that eventually ended in heartbreak for the visitors.
The 22-run defeat came after India off-spinner Sundar sounded confident of his side's win prior to the final day's play. Despite losing four wickets in a 193-run chase in a short burst before stumps on the penultimate day where he picked up four English wickets, Sundar said that India would wrap up the victory by Lunch on the fifth day.
'Definitely India winning, probably just after lunch…,' Washington had told Sky Sports.
'We are sitting pretty and we will come out positive. We have some solid batters in the dressing room.
'We have all day but there needs to be the perfect plan. It is exciting in every way. Winning the Lord's Test would be amazing.'
The Tamil Nadu spinner's words would come back to bite him as a collective English unit led by Jofra Archer and captain Ben Stokes would reduce them to their second-narrowest defeat away from home by 22 runs. Walking in at 7, the left-handed Sundar fell for a duck as Archer completed a splendid catch of his own bowling.
You cannot do that Jofra Archer!
Out of this world 😱 pic.twitter.com/mGNpgKPphl
— England Cricket (@englandcricket) July 14, 2025
'There's a little clip of when Washington came out to bat and (Brendon) McCullum over the balcony, sort of you know telling everyone to raise it, it's the guy who's been chirping. You set yourself up, don't you? It's horrible. But you're like, no, everyone's all over me. I could have just come out here and tried to, you know, have a good game and try my best,' said Buttler on the For the Love of Cricket podcast.
'But now everyone knows that what I've said in the media last night, and this is going to be, everyone's after me. Even McCullum, possibly the only time he didn't have his feet up. He's leant forward to say, come on. Let's ramp it up for this guy.' Buttler said the simple pep talk for England would have involved watching a replay of Sundar's interview.
'I wonder if he's just sort of, you know, got his words out wrong, you know, hopefully we'll win. But it was the proper incredible confidence. Yeah, we're going to win. Someone will have heard about that in the dressing room. It's almost like instead of anyone having to say anything this morning for England you could have just played that interview and that would have got people so fired up,' said Buttler.
A post shared by For The Love of Cricket (@loveofcricketpod)
Meanwhile, veteran Broad also picked up on how all-rounder Nitish Kumar Reddy faced a fiery spell from the English bowlers, led by the searing Archer as he came out to bat with India reeling at 82 for seven post Sundar's dismissal. Broad revealed that the fiery six-minute exchange between the Indian fielders and England openers Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett, spurred the home team on, with Nitish becoming a primary target after his vocal presence in the slips.
Broad relayed Archer's revelation that it was a team plan to meet with 'fire with fire' after incident involving Crawley on Day 3.
'Jofra bowled quick, bowled his fastest spell in England shirt, up the hill at the nursery end, flying through at 92 mile an hour. I said, 'God, I've never seen you like as fired up as that.' And he said, actually, it was a team plan. They've (India) had a go at Zach Crawley. We've got to meet fire with fire here.
'(Rishabh) Pant's dismissal was my favourite, but he bounced Reddy first ball and everyone came in. Duckett, (Harry) Brook, (Joe) Rooty, getting stuck into Reddy because reports came back from the middle when Crawley and Duckett were out there that Reddy was the most vocal,' said Broad.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shubman Gill told he 'doesn't need' Jasprit Bumrah because Mohammed Siraj can win games now: 'Tell him we no longer...'
Shubman Gill told he 'doesn't need' Jasprit Bumrah because Mohammed Siraj can win games now: 'Tell him we no longer...'

Hindustan Times

timea few seconds ago

  • Hindustan Times

Shubman Gill told he 'doesn't need' Jasprit Bumrah because Mohammed Siraj can win games now: 'Tell him we no longer...'

The Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy between England and India definitely lived up to the high billing as the two teams produced some riveting action both on and off the field. It is only fitting for the series outcome to read 2-2 as neither team was above or beneath the other, although India did win more sessions. The decider at the Oval had everything going down to the wire before Mohammed Siraj's never-say-die attitude helped Shubman Gill's India register a narrow six-run win. Has Mohammed Siraj pipped Jasprit Bumrah to become Shubman Gill and India's No. 1 Test bowler?(AFP) Harry Brook and Joe Root scored centuries in the final innings as England looked set to chase down 374 to win the series 3-1. However, Brook's irresponsible shot opened the floodgates for India, and the visitors barged through the door to register a memorable win on Day 5. Days after the conclusion of the five-match series, The Hindustan Times spoke to former England spinner Monty Panesar about the high skill on display by both teams. Panesar, who was instrumental in helping England win a Test series in India in 2012, said Gill's side would rue the chance of not winning the series after being on top of England for most of the 25 days. He also discussed Siraj's workhorse-like ability and whether Joe Root can break Sachin Tendulkar's record of most runs in Test cricket. Excerpt: Is 2-2 a fair reflection of how both teams played in the series? After a heavy workload of the IPL, India goes and plays a five-Test match series. Every given moment, they turned up. At Old Trafford, they drew the Test match. At Lords, it could have been anyone's game. They probably should have won that game, but England were very lucky with that wicket of Siraj. And then, at the Oval, they were brilliant. At the Oval, on the 5th day, overcast conditions, everything went in their favour. So, I think India played better cricket. I think the Oval test match victory was probably, actually, the moment when it showed that India won the series. Well, I think everyone took it by surprise. When Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ravichandran Ashwin retired, everyone thought England would win the contest. But it shows the strength of Indian cricket. Shubman Gill rose to the challenge. I always thought that he was almost lazy in his footwork when he wasn't the captain, and now, he's phenomenal. And I think we're going to hopefully see the best of them in the next couple of years. Did Shubman Gill impress you as a captain? What did you make of his tactical acumen? He'll grow into the role. I think his career Test will probably come, how he does in India, really. And, more than turning pictures, you know, does he have the spinners to do that without Ashwin and Jadeja? Washington Sundar will be there, and it will be about whether he can live up to the expectations of Ashwin. I think Kuldeep Yadav has to play. He has to bring him into the equation somehow. But the biggest factor, as for Shubman here, is that he can win Test matches without Jasprit Bumrah. That's a massive acclaim. The best bowler in the world. He doesn't need him. I think India can win Test matches without Jasprit Bumrah. I think that's the biggest achievement from his captaincy. Mohammed Siraj basically put the concept of workload management to rest as he bowled more than 180 overs in the entire series. Was he the game-changer for India? Well, it just shows that Mohammed Siraj is the key now. They've got to build an attack around him. And his fitness is very important. Jasprit Bumrah doesn't have the fitness to play the five Test matches. So, he's again, in and out, kind of the guy to come in. But Mohammed Siraj can win the games now. As Bumrah has the X-factor, Mohamed Siraj is the key to whether they have a series win or not. So, for an overseas series away from India, Mohammed Siraj is very important now for Gautam Gambhir and Shubman Gill. Also Read: Sachin Tendulkar says, 'No batsman will like India pacer Mohammed Siraj' as he is… Should India start looking beyond Jasprit Bumrah in Tests? Or is there a case for him to play just overseas Tests? I think it's good if he does play the overseas Test matches, and probably you don't need him for home Test matches. India can beat any team at home probably without him, but for overseas Tests, he is the X-factor. They can probably tell him that we no longer need you for home Tests. But for the away Tests, we definitely do. Does this series result give Gautam Gambhir some breathing space as the head coach, considering there was a lot of pressure on him? I think Gautam Gambhir has a bit of time. The home series, when they play, is going to be massive. He cannot afford to lose another home series. If he wins, he will keep his job, but if he loses, I think times are up for Gautam Gambhir. India cannot afford to lose another series at home. Also Read: Chris Woakes didn't want to bat against 90mph bouncer from Siraj with one hand; felt 'exposed' on Day 5 vs India Joe Root scored his 39th Test ton at the Oval. Do you think he has it in him to break Sachin Tendulkar's record of most runs in Tests? "He'll break it. He'll break it, and he'll go past it. I think he'll end up scoring 18,000 test runs. Because he's only 34, right? He's 34, he's got another 6 years. In 6 years, he'll probably score another 4,000-5,000 Test runs. So, Tendulkar played until 40, so he'll probably end up playing until 40. He'll break that, and he'll go past it. I think he'll end up scoring 18,000 test runs. Lastly, I have to ask you about England. How do you see their chances in the upcoming Ashes? I think Australia are the favourites because the attack is very strong. And England will have to find a way to score 400 consistently. They sometimes give it away, just like Jacob Bethell did in the Oval Test. He gave it away by dancing down the track. He got out, India got the momentum. I don't think England can afford to do that in Australia. They might just have to curb a little bit on Bazball in Australia.

I never considered not going out to bat against India: Chris Woakes
I never considered not going out to bat against India: Chris Woakes

Hindustan Times

timea few seconds ago

  • Hindustan Times

I never considered not going out to bat against India: Chris Woakes

London, England all-rounder Chris Woakes says not going out to bat due to a dislocated shoulder against India on the final day of the fifth Test was something he never considered, even as he wondered if his career was at risk when he suffered the injury. I never considered not going out to bat against India: Chris Woakes Woakes came out with his left hand wrapped in a sling and tucked inside his sweater at the fall of the penultimate wicket with the fifth Test — which India won narrowly — tantalisingly placed. Woakes said he felt it was his "duty to do it for everyone" and that he is still gutted that England lost the game. "I don't know what it is. You just know you're part of something bigger. It's not just you that you're playing for out there," Woakes, awaiting further scans, told The Guardian. 'It's your team and your teammates, all the hard work and the sacrifices they put in, the people watching at home and in the ground. You just feel a duty to do it for everyone." "I'm still gutted, devastated really, that we couldn't get the fairytale. But I never considered not going out there, even if it had been 100 runs still to win or whatever,' he added. Woakes said it felt nice to walk out to a standing ovation but does not read much into his heroic act. 'It was nice to have the ovation and some of the Indian players came over to show their respect. But any other player would have done the same. You couldn't just call it off at nine wickets down,' he said. Woakes revealed he began practising batting one-handed from the fourth day onwards with England assistant coach Marcus Trescothick. 'I defended one normally and, oh mate, it was agony,' he said. 'We soon worked out that a left-hander's stance would shield the shoulder and at least allow me to sort of block with my top hand in control. I hit a few, missed a few, but it felt like the only way to survive,' he added. The senior England player also revealed the exchanges he had with India skipper Shubman Gill and his deputy Rishabh Pant, who himself put on a similar act of bravery in the fourth Test when he batted with a broken foot. "Shubman said something like: 'That was incredibly brave,'' he said. 'I told him: 'You've had an unbelievable series, well played, and credit to your team'. Both sets of players had been through the mill in the series and deserve credit for the show we put on. Both teams wanted the win, of course, but it does kind of feel fair that it was drawn.' 'I saw Rishabh had put an image of me on Instagram with a salute emoji, so I replied thanking him: 'Appreciate the love and hope the foot is OK,' etc. Woakes added, "He then sent me a voice note saying: 'I hope all is OK, good luck with the recovery and I hope we meet again out there some day'. I obviously said sorry for the broken foot." Woakes, who did not get to face a ball, said running between the wickets was the toughest. "The first one was the worst. All I had taken was codeine and it was just so sore. Instinct took over here – even with my arm strapped down I tried to run as you naturally do,' he said. "I genuinely worried my shoulder had popped back out again, hence you saw me throw my helmet off, rip the glove off with my teeth, and check it was OK." 'It was bittersweet in the end. part of me wondered what it might be like, to see if I could have defended the ball, seen out an over maybe, squeezed a run or carved a four.' He continued, 'But the other side of it was: 'Thank God I didn't face a 90mph bouncer, one-handed, facing the wrong way around'. I knew I was going to have to wear a few bouncers if I did get on strike.' Woakes wondered if the injury was career-threatening right after his slide on the first day of the Test. 'The outfield was wet from the rain, almost greasy, and my hand slipped as I landed and my full body weight went through my shoulder. I heard a pop and knew I was in trouble,' he said. 'The pain came on pretty quickly and my arm was just hanging there. It was grim and my thoughts were racing. 'Is it game over? Is it career done?' It was a horrible place to be,' he added. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

I never considered not going out to bat against India: Chris Woakes
I never considered not going out to bat against India: Chris Woakes

News18

time24 minutes ago

  • News18

I never considered not going out to bat against India: Chris Woakes

London, Aug 7 (PTI) England all-rounder Chris Woakes says not going out to bat due to a dislocated shoulder against India on the final day of the fifth Test was something he never considered, even as he wondered if his career was at risk when he suffered the injury. Woakes came out with his left hand wrapped in a sling and tucked inside his sweater at the fall of the penultimate wicket with the fifth Test — which India won narrowly — tantalisingly placed. Woakes said he felt it was his 'duty to do it for everyone" and that he is still gutted that England lost the game. 'I don't know what it is. You just know you're part of something bigger. It's not just you that you're playing for out there," Woakes, awaiting further scans, told The Guardian. 'It's your team and your teammates, all the hard work and the sacrifices they put in, the people watching at home and in the ground. You just feel a duty to do it for everyone." 'I'm still gutted, devastated really, that we couldn't get the fairytale. But I never considered not going out there, even if it had been 100 runs still to win or whatever," he added. Woakes said it felt nice to walk out to a standing ovation but does not read much into his heroic act. 'It was nice to have the ovation and some of the Indian players came over to show their respect. But any other player would have done the same. You couldn't just call it off at nine wickets down," he said. Woakes revealed he began practising batting one-handed from the fourth day onwards with England assistant coach Marcus Trescothick. 'I defended one normally and, oh mate, it was agony," he said. 'We soon worked out that a left-hander's stance would shield the shoulder and at least allow me to sort of block with my top hand in control. I hit a few, missed a few, but it felt like the only way to survive," he added. The senior England player also revealed the exchanges he had with India skipper Shubman Gill and his deputy Rishabh Pant, who himself put on a similar act of bravery in the fourth Test when he batted with a broken foot. 'Shubman said something like: 'That was incredibly brave,'" he said. 'I told him: 'You've had an unbelievable series, well played, and credit to your team'. Both sets of players had been through the mill in the series and deserve credit for the show we put on. Both teams wanted the win, of course, but it does kind of feel fair that it was drawn." 'I saw Rishabh (Pant) had put an image of me on Instagram with a salute emoji, so I replied thanking him: 'Appreciate the love and hope the foot is OK,' etc. Woakes added, 'He then sent me a voice note saying: 'I hope all is OK, good luck with the recovery and I hope we meet again out there some day'. I obviously said sorry for the broken foot." Woakes, who did not get to face a ball, said running between the wickets was the toughest. 'The first one was the worst. All I had taken was codeine and it was just so sore. Instinct took over here – even with my arm strapped down I tried to run as you naturally do," he said. 'I genuinely worried my shoulder had popped back out again, hence you saw me throw my helmet off, rip the glove off with my teeth, and check it was OK." 'It was bittersweet in the end. (A) part of me wondered what it might be like, to see if I could have defended the ball, seen out an over maybe, squeezed a run or carved a four." He continued, 'But the other side of it was: 'Thank God I didn't face a 90mph bouncer, one-handed, facing the wrong way around'. I knew I was going to have to wear a few bouncers if I did get on strike." Woakes wondered if the injury was career-threatening right after his slide on the first day of the Test. 'The outfield was wet from the rain, almost greasy, and my hand slipped as I landed and my full body weight went through my shoulder. I heard a pop and knew I was in trouble," he said. 'The pain came on pretty quickly and my arm was just hanging there. It was grim and my thoughts were racing. 'Is it game over? Is it career done?' It was a horrible place to be," he added. PTI DDV APA APA (This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) First Published: Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store