
England left in Deep funk by nightwatchman Akash's unexpected half-century
His was a first-class innings in name only: he faced 18 balls and hit eight of them for six (it stands as the joint 15th fastest half-century in the long-form game) as he careened to 53. By which point they were well into day three, the team's score was an unnecessarily healthy 773 for seven, and Bengal declared.
It was the first time in the history of first-class cricket that there had been nine half-centuries in a single innings, erasing from the record books the Australians who scored 843, with eight fifties, against a combined Oxford and Cambridge University side in 1893. Until this game it was the only half-century of Deep's career and his highest first-class score. In 37 innings between that game and this he averaged 10.73.
Yet here he was, batting at No 4 after coming in as nightwatchman, facing for large parts of the third morning a bowler in Jamie Overton who had played seven red-ball games in the past two years and taken wickets in two of them.
For a while it felt like this Test match was testing, more than anything, the definition of first-class cricket. Midway through the 26th over Deep, on 21, edged Josh Tongue to third slip, where Zak Crawley continued the theme by fumbling the catch.
This is obviously unfair on Deep, who played an innings which was, whatever your allegiance, remarkably controlled, and potentially, depending on your allegiance, also wildly infuriating.
Nightwatchmanship is a strange concept, suggesting a degree of cowardice on the part of the actual batter who was carded to come in instead – and if, as here, it is the captain who seeks their protection, something of the General Melchett style of leadership. As Jason Gillespie put it, writing about his world-record unbeaten 201 for Australia against Bangladesh in 2006: 'When your captain says he doesn't fancy it and wants you to do his job, you just nod and say: 'Yes skip, no problem, I will step up and do your job.''
So Deep's primary task had been to protect Shubman Gill as the evening gloom descended towards the end of Friday, but he returned on Saturday determined to generate a different kind of gloom in his opponents.
He heaved the third ball of the day through midwicket for four, and was on his way. Precisely 19 overs later he smeared a Gus Atkinson delivery to the square leg boundary to reach his half-century and the residents of the one pocket of the ground overwhelmingly populated by India fans leapt to their feet, singing his name with the uniquely delicious relish that results when delight is blended with disbelief.
He was accompanied throughout, sometimes a little awkwardly, by Yashasvi Jaiswal. The two seemed to communicate rarely, most deliveries followed with them both setting off slowly towards square leg, heads down, on parallel paths 22 yards apart. But it was not until lunch approached that the method showed signs of failure.
Sign up to The Spin
Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action
after newsletter promotion
In the 41st over, Deep edged Overton along the ground and through the gap between third slip and gully, those four runs establishing his new first-class high score; in the 42nd he did it again off Josh Tongue, aerially this time, those four runs taking the partnership into triple figures; and in the 43rd he finally fell, sending a leading edge looping to point when trying to work Overton into the leg side. By then he had scored 66, and had watched the night all the way to 12.50pm the following afternoon.
Jaiswal will steal much of the attention, having neatly bookended his series with another century to go with the one he scored at Headingley. But for a while at the Oval, the India opener was outshone, and he contributed precisely half as many runs as his teammate to a partnership of 107.
Given the freedom with which Jaiswal had batted at the start of his innings this was unexpected: at the point the nightwatchman walked out he had sprinted to 51 off 47, and at the point Deep walked in again he had added a humble 33 off 56.
For all the delight that greeted the achievements of the morning's unlikely hero in the stands and on India's balcony, Jaiswal – like England – had got stuck for a while in what can only be described as a Deep funk.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time Out Dubai
3 hours ago
- Time Out Dubai
ACC issues important Asia Cup 2025 ticket warning: What fans need to know
The Asian Cricket Council has issued an important update for fans ahead of this year's Asia Cup. The biennial T20 cricket tournament will be hosted by the United Arab Emirates, with the continent's biggest clashes taking place in Dubai and Abu Dhabi. India vs Pakistan could be played up to three times in Dubai during September and is likely to be the hottest ticket in town. However, the ACC has warned fans to be patient as Asia Cup tickets have yet to officially go on sale. 🎟️ ATTENTION FANS 🎟️ An important update regarding tickets for the DP World Asia Cup 2025. #ACC — AsianCricketCouncil (@ACCMedia1) August 19, 2025 Cricket fans have been so excited by the Asia Cup, set to take place between Tuesday September 9 and Sunday September 28, that they've snapped up third-party tickets. In a post on X, formerly Twitter, the ACC said that any tickets currently on sale are unauthorised, fraudulent and will not grant entry to any fixtures at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium or Abu Dhabi's Sheikh Zayed Cricket Stadium. A formal ticket announcement will be made by the Asian Cricket Council and the UAE's Emirates Cricket Board in the near future. The continental cricket council has requested that fans keep an eye on official pages and avoid unofficial sellers. You may like: Asia Cup 2025 in Dubai: India and Pakistan squads revealed, big fixtures and more Asia Cup 2025 fixture guide Asia Cup Group A fixtures India vs UAE, Wed Sep 10 in Dubai at 6pm Pakistan vs Oman, Fri Sep 12 in Dubai at 6pm India vs Pakistan, Sun Sep 14 in Dubai at 6pm UAE vs Oman, Mon Sep 15 in Abu Dhabi at 4pm Pakistan vs UAE, Wed Sep 17 in Dubai at 6pm India vs Oman, Fri Sep 19 in Abu Dhabi at 6pm Asia Cup Group B fixtures Afghanistan vs Hong Kong, Tue Sep 9 in Abu Dhabi at 6pm Bangladesh vs Hong Kong, Thu Sep 11in Abu Dhabi at 6pm Bangladesh vs Sri Lanka, Sat Sep 13 in Abu Dhabi at 6pm Sri Lanka vs Hong Kong, Mon Sep 15 in Dubai at 6pm Bangladesh vs Afghanistan, Tue Sep 16 in Abu Dhabi at 6pm Sri Lanka vs Afghanistan, Thu Sep 18 in Abu Dhabi at 6pm Asia Cup 2025 Super Four and final dates Group B winner vs Group B runner-up, Sat Sep 20 at 6pm in Dubai Group A winner vs Group A runner-up, Sun Sep 21 at 6pm in Dubai Group A runner-up vs Group B winner, Tue Sep 23 at 6pm in Abu Dhabi Group A winner vs Group B runner-up, Wed Sep 24 at 6pm in Dubai Group A runner-up vs Group B runner-up, Thu Sep 25 at 6pm in Dubai Group A winner vs Group B runner-up, Fri Sep 26 at 6pm in Dubai Final, Sun Sep 28 at 6pm in Dubai Other things to do in Dubai Where to get the viral FIX chocolate in Dubai (or the best dupes if you can't) Get that sweet tooth satisfied 50 free things to do in Dubai You won't believe what you can do Brilliant family-friendly days out in the UAE For you and the little ones


Reuters
19 hours ago
- Reuters
India plans to ban online games played with money, citing addiction risks
NEW DELHI, Aug 19 (Reuters) - India's government plans to ban online games played with money, a proposed bill showed on Tuesday, in what would be a heavy blow for an industry that has attracted billions of dollars of foreign investment. Citing psychological and financial harm it says can be caused by such games, the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Bill 2025 says that no person "shall offer, aid, abet, induce or otherwise indulge or engage in" the offering of online money games and such services. The 13-page bill, which has not yet been made public but has been reviewed by Reuters, describes an online money game as one played by a user by depositing money in expectation of winning monetary and other enrichment. The Indian market for such gaming is set to be worth $3.6 billion by 2029, venture capital firm Lumikai says. Endorsements by top Indian cricketers and other marketing efforts have boosted appeal and investor interest of real money gaming apps such as the popular fantasy cricket games operated by startups Dream11 and Mobile Premier League. Dream11 commands a valuation of $8 billion while Mobile Premier League is valued at $2.5 billion, PitchBook data shows. The Indian government has long been concerned about how such games are addictive. India's IT ministry, which has drafted the bill, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. MPL and Dream11 declined to comment. In fantasy cricket games on Dream11, users create their teams by paying as little as 8 rupees (10 U.S. cents), with a total prize pool of 1.2 million Indian rupees ($14,000). The apps become more popular during the Indian Premier League season, one of the world's most popular cricket tournaments. The bill states that anyone who offers such money games could face a jail term of up to three years and a fine. "Such games often use manipulative design features, addictive algorithms ... while promoting compulsive behaviour leading to financial ruin," the bill said.


Reuters
a day ago
- Reuters
Gill and Bumrah in India's Asia Cup squad, Jaiswal ignored
NEW DELHI, Aug 19 (Reuters) - Defending champions India named top order batter Shubman Gill and pace spearhead Jasprit Bumrah in their Twenty20 squad on Tuesday for next month's Asia Cup in the United Arab Emirates. Opener Yashasvi Jaiswal and middle order batter Shreyas Iyer, however, could not make the cut in the 15-member squad led by Suryakumar Yadav. India's test captain Gill has not played a T20 International since July last year when he was Suryakumar's deputy on the tour of Sri Lanka. "That's where we started a new cycle," Suryakumar, who took over T20 captaincy from Rohit Sharma after India won the 20-overs World Cup title last year, told reporters. "After that he got busy with all the test series and he didn't get an opportunity to play T20s because he was busy playing test cricket and Champions Trophy. "So he's there in the squad and we're happy to have him." India also included Bumrah, whose workload has been a major concern for the team think-tank, which played him in three of the five tests in England earlier this year. With three opening options in Gill, Abhishek Sharma and Sanju Samson - India could not accommodate Jaiswal. "With regard to Yashasvi, it's just unfortunate again," chief selector Ajit Agarkar said. "There's Abhishek Sharma, what he's done over the last year or so, plus he can bowl a little bit, he gives us that option if required. "One of these guys was going to miss out, Yashasvi just has to wait for his chance." Samson and Jitesh Sharma are the two wicketkeepers in the side, which also includes left-arm wrist-spinner Kuldeep Yadav. India begin their Group A campaign against hosts United Arab Emirates in Dubai before meeting arch-rivals Pakistan at the same venue four days later. India squad: Suryakumar Yadav (captain), Shubman Gill, Hardik Pandya, Arshdeep Singh, Abhishek Sharma, Tilak Varma, Shivam Dube, Axar Patel, Jitesh Sharma, Jasprit Bumrah, Varun Chakravarthy, Kuldeep Yadav, Harshit Rana, Rinku Singh, Sanju Samson