logo
The most secure ton on record - breaking down Gill's masterclass

The most secure ton on record - breaking down Gill's masterclass

BBC News15 hours ago
It was, statistically at least, the most secure Test century on record in England.Rookie India captain Shubman Gill, with all of the noise in the background and on the back of a punch-to-the-stomach defeat last week in Leeds, defied England on day one of the second Test at Edgbaston.The hosts will have sensed their moment to push further into the ascendency in this series when winning the toss and choosing to 'have a chase'.But Gill responded with a controlled 114 not out to better some modern-day greats and help his side close on a respectable 310-5 in Birmingham."The way he is batting has been incredible to see," said team-mate Yashasvi Jaiswal, who shared a stand of 80 with his captain."He is very clear in his head what he needs to do."
So, what exactly did Gill do?
Gill would have been forgiven for leaving Edgbaston on Tuesday with his head in a spin. In his pre-match news conference he fended question after question about his team selection this week - mostly about whether his star bowler Jasprit Bumrah would play.The travelling India press pack is large and unrelenting. Gill struggled to sate them. The message was muddled. His batting in Birmingham 24 hours later was not.Having spoken about wanting to compartmentalise batting and captaincy before the series, Gill strolled to the middle and played an innings with a false shot percentage of just 3.5%. The average in England is 12%.It makes it the most controlled ton on these shores since analysts CricViz began recording such statistics in 2006.England run-getting legends like Sir Alastair Cook, Joe Root and Kevin Pietersen were never this controlled using the same metric. Nor were modern-day greats Rahul Dravid, Ricky Ponting and Kumar Sangakkara, who have all peeled off glorious hundreds on these shores in the last 20 years.Gill's innings contained just two outside edges off Chris Woakes - both before he had reached 20 - and an inside edge to Brydon Carse that thwarted an England lbw review.There were three more false shots - any edge, play and miss or stroke mishit - to Woakes and two to Ben Stokes. Otherwise that was it. As close to perfection as anyone has been in recent years in England.The pitch was the second easiest on record on a first day at Edgbaston - number one was in 2017 against West Indies, in case you wondered - but Gill responded with the most controlled of knocks.England were not going to stop India's leader from raising his bat and celebrating with that now-familiar bow.
How Gill has conquered English conditions
Gill was named Test captain in May despite doubts around his record overseas. In six innings in England he averaged 14.66 but, batting at number four further from the new-ball movement, he made 147 in his first innings as skipper in Leeds."He has worked on his defence," Ravi Shastri, India's coach when Gill made his Test debut, told Sky Sports."When he last came to England he played with hard hands and pushed at the ball. Now he allows the ball to come and hit the bat. He is trusting his defence."That trust was shown in the middle. He took 125 balls to reach fifty and 199 to reach 100 - both his slowest efforts.England's plan to Gill was clear after his success at Headingley: their lines were the straightest they have bowled at a batter in 16 years as the pace bowlers targeted the pads."It felt like we were close to getting him lbw where he got a little inside edge," said Woakes."Other than those it felt like he was in control of pretty much everything. Credit to him."He played very well. It is a very good hundred and a big one for his team."
Whose record did Gill beat?
England's greatest tormentor in the CricViz era has been Steve Smith but even the great Australia does not come close to a century as controlled as Gill's here.His lowest false shot percentage in any of his eight Test centuries in England was 9% - a difference of far more than a strip of sandpaper or two.The previous best came from an unlikely name - former England opener Sam Robson in his 127 in his second Test against Sri Lanka at Headingley in 2014.The best by an overseas player was the great South African all-rounder Jacques Kallis, whose figure was just 4.4% in his epic 182 not out at the Oval in 2012.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wales get set to end horror 17-Test losing run against Eddie Jones' Japan amid sweltering Far East temperatures
Wales get set to end horror 17-Test losing run against Eddie Jones' Japan amid sweltering Far East temperatures

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Wales get set to end horror 17-Test losing run against Eddie Jones' Japan amid sweltering Far East temperatures

Wales head coach Matt Sherratt says he is more concerned by the prospect of a greasy match ball than the sweltering conditions facing his players in Japan. The thermometer dial is expected to be around 30 degrees Celsius when Wales kick-off at 2pm local time in Kitakyushu on Saturday against Eddie Jones ' Brave Blossoms. The temperature will feel a lot more when high humidity is factored in and the Wales squad, who used a heat chamber at home ahead of the two-Test series, have turned to ice baths, ice towels and cold flannel hats since arriving in Japan. Wales are looking to end a horror run of 17 consecutive Test defeats in the Far East, but a victory is not guaranteed. 'We've done everything we can to prepare the players for this,' said interim head coach Sherratt, who has made 11 changes from the side hammered by England in the Six Nations Championship three months ago. 'The players weren't hugely excited about the heat chamber in Cardiff, but they worked really hard.' WALES TEAM TO FACE EDDIE JONES' JAPAN Blair Murray; Tom Rogers, Johnny Williams, Ben Thomas, Josh Adams; Sam Costelow, Kieran Hardy; Nicky Smith, Dewi Lake (capt), Keiron Assiratti, Ben Carter, Teddy Williams, Alex Mann, Josh Macleod, Taulupe Faletau Replacements: Liam Belcher, Gareth Thomas, Archie Griffin, James Ratti, Aaron Wainwright, Tommy Reffell, Rhodri Williams, Joe Roberts Kick-off: 6am, Saturday Venue: Kitakyushu TV: BBC Wales Sherratt added: 'It was as close as we could get in the UK to the temperatures in Japan, but it's obviously different here because we're training in it for 80 minutes rather than five or 10 minutes. 'We saw a lot of wet balls and we've trained in the middle of the day here to get used to the heat. If I'm honest it's not the heat, it's the ball (that's a problem). 'It's very difficult to keep the ball dry. It's probably going to be a game on TV where the conditions look perfect, but the ball's going to be really greasy and will test your skill set.' After being parachuted in to replace Warren Gatland midway through the Six Nations, Sherratt is again in charge of Wales in Japan this month while the Welsh Rugby Union continues to search for a new permanent head coach. Wales are without usual captain Jac Morgan, who is with the British & Irish Lions in Australia. Absent too is scrum-half Tomos Williams who was also on Lions duty until he suffered a cruel hamstring injury. There are four survivors from the record 68-14 defeat to England in March who will start in Japan – No 8 Taulupe Faletau, prop Nicky Smith, centre Ben Thomas and full-back Blair Murray remaining. Faletau will win his 109th cap against Japan but the other two back-row members, Alex Mann and Josh Macleod, have only seven Test appearances between them. As well as Faletau, only wing Josh Adams, Smith and scrum-half Kieran Hardy possess over 20 caps in the starting line-up. Hooker Dewi Lake captains the side, inexperienced pair Ben Carter and Teddy Williams form a second-row partnership and centre Johnny Williams returns after last featuring at the 2023 World Cup. There is some experience on the bench in prop Gareth Thomas and back-rowers Aaron Wainwright and Tommy Reffell who are three of the six forward replacements. Sherratt said: 'We've had three weeks prep and it (selection) is a mixture of recent club form and trying to get some combinations we've seen in training. 'It's a new coaching group and we've tried to let the players start on an even playing field and select on what we've seen. 'We feel conditions are probably going to be tough to start with and to have some real quality experience off the bench will be massive. 'It's not really a 15 we've picked, it's a genuine 23. 'I've learned at Cardiff that you don't throw on all your experience at once because between 60 and 80 (minutes) is where some of the crucial decision-making comes in. 'We need a genuine 80-minute performance.' The second Test will be played in Kobe on Saturday week.

Wales' rugby league youngsters have been making their mark
Wales' rugby league youngsters have been making their mark

Leader Live

time32 minutes ago

  • Leader Live

Wales' rugby league youngsters have been making their mark

The U16s, U18s and Students teams all enjoyed success. Clive Griffiths made a welcome return to where it all started for him as a head coach, with Wales Students, coaching them to a 34-10 win over Scotland in the opening match of the Student Four Nations at the University of Nottingham. It was Wales Students' first international win since they returned after the pandemic in 2023, and after losing the last five matches, one with their heaviest ever defeat and two more in the top ten losses, this win, orchestrated almost perfectly from start to finish, was a welcome sight. The win set the standard for what will be a tough week for Wales, which concludes against Ireland on Saturday. Wales scored seven tries in their win, as did England as they beat Ireland 40-18. Lewis Ingram and Thomas Moore grabbed two tries apiece with Finlay Northrop, Lewis Howells and Leo Jones also crossing the whitewash. Wales Students lost out 42-0 to England Students in the Four Nations tournament. Jamie O'Keeffe opened the scoring for England at Nottingham and that was to be the first of nine tries on the day. Leon Stewart soon finished off a sweeping passing move, before Wales enjoyed a brief spell of possession in the England half for the first time in the game. When England re-entered the Welsh half, Ben Bell-Thorn grabbed the next try, converted by Oli Winterbottom. Winterbottom added to his and England's points tally with a try direct from a scrum just five minutes before the interval. Bell-Thorn then powered his way over the line for what turned out to be the last play of a one-sided first half. Wales attacked well at the start of the second half and were unlucky not to score, Lewis Ingram getting close as he was held just short of the line. Ben O'Donnell, Teddy Davidson, Charlie Yeomans and Dan Perry added further England scores. North Wales Crusaders' teenager Evan Rowlands and Salford's Ralf Roberts, who hails from Wrexham, were in the U18s side that beat Scotland 34-20. That means Wales go into a winner-takes-all match against England next month in the final round in a thriller at Grangemouth RUFC. There were less than ten minutes on the clock when Alex Richardson scored a try to give Wales the lead and Kyson Rees added the conversion. Scotland hit back on 15 minutes thanks to a Harrison Goldthorpe try. Shaun Callan converted to level the scores. It wasn't long before Wales regained the lead through an unconverted Rowlands try, but Scotland went into the break 14-10 to the good due to tries from Harry Woodard and Max Erasmus. Unfortunately for Wales, errors were costing them and Scotland capitalised. They increased their lead 10 minutes into the second half through an Isaac Maclean try that Callan converted. But then two back-to-back tries from Wales turned the game around. Firstly from Dan Wilds with Jack Wilcox converting, before he scored a try of his own from kick-off. Gabrielson kicked the goal and Wales were 22-20 up. Then with eight minutes to go, an Ethan Williams try increased Wales' lead to 26-20. Gabrielson couldn't convert so Wales were just one score ahead in the dying stages of the match. Wales sealed the game thanks to an excellent try from Oscar Jones just three minutes from the end, quickly followed up by Richardson's second and Wales' seventh as the final whistle blew. Wales, coached by Paul Berry, are top of the U16 Four Nations table after a 40-18 success over the Scots. Following England's draw with Ireland, a draw against the English in a fortnight will be enough to give Wales their third successive Four Nations title. Elis Thomas (2), Matthew Clatworthy, Evan Williams, Harry Wrigglesworth, Tyler Mills and Charlie Eatly got the tries for Wales.

County cricket: who cares for records when almost every match is a draw?
County cricket: who cares for records when almost every match is a draw?

The Guardian

time40 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

County cricket: who cares for records when almost every match is a draw?

Surrey nudged one point above Nottinghamshire at the top of Division One after they could only draw with Durham. There were five matches played in the latest Kookaborra round of matches and four were drawn. OK, you do need to bat well to score 305, as Dom Sibley did, or to declare on 820 for nine, as Surrey did, but the champions fell 10 (yes, 10) wickets short of their objective. So Rory Burns' strategy was, at best, suboptimal. Which raises the question: do such absurd scores in the first innings of a match reach and pass a tipping point where a draw becomes more likely than a win? I can't quite rationalise it, but it feels like it's not just leaving time to bowl out the opposition twice that counts, but leaving them a sliver of hope that the match is still alive. Perhaps the most damning judgment on the whole debacle of using a ball wholly ill-suited to promoting balanced, attacking cricket was offered by the radio commentary team at the Oval, who could barely conceal their contempt for whatever it was that this version of first class cricket had become. Congratulations to Durham, and especially Alex Lees with two centuries, but if so varied and skilled an attack as the champions' concede 362 and 262 for none, and cricket fanatics on the mic are tearing their hair out, it's time to send the ball 10,000 miles home. Or into space. Nottinghamshire also drew having come no closer to the win than Surrey, but they secured three fewer bonus points in doing so and slipped into second as a consequence. If someone had told me a decade ago that I would be writing about draws, record scores and bonus points, I might never have started this column. To be fair, Notts had a tougher ride than the Londoners, finding themselves three down and still 236 runs in arrears of Somerset's first innings. Cue centuries from Ben Slater and Jack Haynes, and handy contributions from Ishan Kishan and Lyndon James. But once a dashing Tom Kohler-Cadmore and a circumspect Tom Abell came together to bat out the match's last 40 overs, the draw was inevitable. Could Notts have done more to force a win because they will need them to overhaul Surrey, who know how to manage a run-in? Probably not, the match 'enjoying' three innings, all progressing at a tad above three an over. If the experiment really is intended to allow English seamers to develop the skills required to take wickets overseas, I'm not sure the 95 overs delivered by bowlers answering that description (for four wickets), nor Jack Leach's 53.2–7–121–6 helped at all. It's not often that you get two double centurions in one innings, but Worcestershire captain Jake Libby (228 in well over 10 hours) and Adam Hose (266 in well under six) did so against Hampshire. But, following on, the old hands, Ben Brown and Liam Dawson, batted for three hours to see out the draw. Evidence perhaps that the tipping point for a first innings is not Surrey's 820 or Worcestershire's 679, but something quicker and lower? So, in four-day cricket, do you ever need more than 500 batting first? Instinctively, I doubt it. And if you pull out at that score as a rule, you're not going to lose too many are you? The result that bucked the trend came at York, where Essex, having started well, fell off a cliff in response to Matthew Revis and Ben Coad racking up 169 runs for the home side's ninth wicket, demolishing the visitors' fragile confidence. Revis's 150 and Coad's 89 represented career highs, the all-rounder and the bowler completely upending the match with bats in hand. But, as the previous points attest, scores were one thing, wickets quite another and Jack White and Coad shared 12 in the match, the opening bowlers ably supported by the back-up seam and spin to deliver a crushing ten wickets victory. Both remain just above basement dwellers Worcestershire but will it matter? A pow-wow this week will finalise the structure of English domestic cricket next year, despite the fact that the current Championship season is well past the halfway mark. Honestly, what other sport would get itself into this situation? Runaway leaders Leicestershire have prompted speculation that they might already have the Division Two title in the bag. But I doubt it was in the plan to test that theory out. After a draw last week, they took a shellacking from Middlesex, the margin an innings and 127 runs. After Sam Robson and Ben Geddes had led the way to 534, the home side were eight down at Grace Road before three figures were on the board. A late rally helped them above 200 but, following on, the pattern more or less repeated itself. Two young Middlesex bowlers did most of the damage. Noah Cornwell, a left-armer pacer in his third first-class match bagged four wickets. Naavya Sharma, a year younger and right arm also in his third match, helped himself to six scalps. Is the future looking brighter for the longsuffering Middlesex members? Well, it's a start. Speaking of starts, Lancashire, under up-and-coming stand-in skipper James Anderson notched an entry in the win column at the ninth attempt. At 132 for six, it was another sigh and another 'here we go again' for Red Rose fans, but Keaton Jennings found a partner in Chris Green and both scored tons, Jack Blatherwick and Tom Bailey contributing too. Anderson removed both openers, but it was George Balderson who ripped out the middle order and, for once this season, Lancashire were ahead in the game. Ashton Turner was the century maker in the second dig and Anderson was soon running in with a lead of 512 and plenty of time, thinking this captaincy lark is a breeze. The other fortysomething skipper, Wayne Madsen, led the resistance, but Balderson, enjoying quite a match, picked up four victims and Lancashire were over the line and out of the bottom two. This article is from The 99.94 Cricket Blog

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