
IND vs ENG 5th Test Day 3 weather and pitch report: Will rain play spoilsport again at The Oval?
After dominating the first session with four wickets and a stunning start with the bat, the hosts saw a collapse which allowed India to claw back into the match as Prasidh Krishana and Mohammed Siraj bagged four wickets each to bowl England out for 247.
India began the day at 213/6 but were all out in just 34 balls of the morning session bowled out in the next 34 deliveries for 224. Returning from an injury, Gus Atkinson impressed with a spell of 5/33 to restrict India to 224.
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In England's reply, the openers started off on a blistering note, as they scored a flurry of boundaries, not before Akash Deep sending back the dangerous Ben Duckett (43).
India ended the day at 75/2 with a lead of 52 runs and with the likes of Gill and Karun Nair to follow, the hosts will hope for overcast conditions over The Oval. However, the forecast predicts it to be a pleasant day with the sun coming out.
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India vs England: Weather report
Saturday (August 2) has good news for the fans and the Indian batters. The forecast predicts 0% chance of rain with sun coming out. Cloud cover will drop to just 6%, and temperatures will hover around 26°C. After losing overs on the first two days due to rain, the third day could prove to be the moving day of this Test as more overs are expected to be played with clear skies.
India vs England: Pitch report
The Oval has been better suited for batters in recent times. The pitch at the venue has been excellent for batting during County Championship and Vitality Blast matches this year. However, in the current match, the the green-top and largely overcast conditions has meant that it has assisted the pacers. With the weather likely to remain sunny, the pitch could flatten out and help the batters.
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First Post
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- First Post
Brook and Root's zen-like batting, Indian pace fight back sets up fitting denouement to dramatic Test series at The Oval
How we got there though was the most electric day of cricket, a fitting denouement to a series that has promised much and been closely fought but in reality has lacked this sort of dramatic flair. read more Harry Brook and Joe Root slammed centuries and added 195 runs for the fourth wicket, nearly steering England to victory on Day 4 of the fifth Test at The Oval. Reuters Well good luck sleeping after that. India and England will return to The Oval on Day Five – the abandonment of play with so little left to run in the game adding a touch of farce to a . The equation: England need 35 runs, India three wickets plus potentially the scalp of a one-armed man – Chris Woakes' participation still a matter of speculation. How we got there though was the most electric day of cricket, a fitting denouement to a series that has promised much and been closely fought but in reality has lacked this sort of dramatic flair. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD England arrived needing 324 more runs from a target of 374, the sound of Zak Crawley's stumps still faintly clattering in their ears from the night before. History suggests nobody really chases that much – only nine larger targets have been successfully hunted down in Test history. But wait, not all was as it seems, one of those chases was a Bazballian masterclass against India themselves in 2022 and only four Tests ago in this series England chased down 371 to win at Headingley – history might be with them after all. From this almost cartoonishly alluring set up the day could surely only disappoint. Well no, as it happens… Brook, Root nearly take England home England started determinedly but a world away from the rat-a-tat scoring pace that they like to impose on the opposition – India's tricky trio of seamers making runs a commodity hard to come by. Every play and miss or half chance for the tourists greeted with cheers and whistles from the Indian half of a crowd with evenly divided loyalties. The anticipatory smell of wickets hung in the air. England were battling bravely but not going anywhere fast, the stoic fight of a team almost certainly heading to defeat but doing so with a stiff upper lip. The wickets did come, Duckett then Pope, England three down (plus Woakes) with victory still a speck on the horizon 268 runs away. The only thing that could rescue England was an unfathomably large partnership – a distant dream that Joe Root and Harry Brook soon set about delivering. Every boundary from Brook & Root's incredible partnership 🤝 195 runs 🏏 24 boundaries 💥 — England Cricket (@englandcricket) August 3, 2025 STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD It started with a moment of high drama, Brook caught on the boundary by Mohammad Siraj on 19, only for him to step on the rope – from out to six in the blink of a clumsily-placed stride – an almost unnecessarily cruel blow for India's most wholehearted competitor in this series. As reprieves go it looked like being game changing, suddenly Root and Brook were batting in a zen-like state, picking off singles wherever they pleased, toying with India as they ticked the runs and milestones down – Brook notching a 10th Test match hundred with half an hour to go before the tea break. With just 73 more needed it seemed England were going to do it with a hand tied behind their back – take note Chris Woakes – the drums, shouts and whistles from the once vociferous Indian section of the crowd a long forgotten memory. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Another twist in the tale This day though had more twists in store. Brook would go, the inevitability of an England win trudging back to the pavilion with him. The fervour of Indian support had been restored, suddenly the tourists were bowling on a minefield that had only just seemed like a road. Pacer Prasidh Krishna struck twice after tea on Day 4 of the fifth Test at The Oval, dismissing Jacob Bethell and a well-set Joe Root. Reuters It seemed Root bringing up his hundred had tipped the momentum back in England's favour, but India had other plans. Suddenly the runs that had flowed all day have never looked harder to come by, England were bogged down by India's relentlessly committed pace attack. Bethell went, then Root, the 35 runs England needed for victory seeming impossible when only a few hours before 200 had seemed like a formality. Then the rain, the gratification of a result in this Test delayed. The sickening thrill of a match whose status is now 'overnight' – cricket's magical limbo where anything could happen the next day. 35 runs or four wickets? Monday will have the answers.


India.com
7 minutes ago
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First Post
37 minutes ago
- First Post
'Lazy decision to call it off: Broad strongly slams the decision to call stumps early on Day 4 at The Oval
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