
IND vs ENG: KL Rahul's Headingley century showed why he excels in overseas Test matches
A man of few words KL Rahul, when the situation demands, does most of the talking. His bat too has the same habit. At Leeds, on an overcast morning, where India was just one batting collapse away from a possible early setback in the series, Rahul produced an innings of gravitas. Between overs, he also kept reminding his batting partner Rishabh Pant, prone to getting sudden bouts of aggression, the virtues of staying calm during crucial periods of play. Rahul, and his bat, came up with a joint statement and that was about his importance to this team with young decision-makers.
Rahul's technique and his painstaking cherry-picking of his many strokes for the situation guided India through the tough phase. The carefree Pant, unlike Rahul a firm believer of playing his natural game, too scored a hundred. He made 118, was out in 72nd over but Rahul scored more, 137, and stayed longer, getting out in the 85th over. The opener stayed back to ensure that England were under scoreboard pressure when they came out to bat in the fourth innings.
India were all out for 364, setting England a victory target of 371. With the Indian innings finishing with about 20 overs to go, Shubman Gill got a shot at the English batsmen late on Monday. At stumps, England were 21/0. The final day of this opening Test throws up endless possibilities.
Anticipation isn't just about the result but also about how England approach this imposing target on the final day. It is rumoured that Bazballers don't play for a draw, they live by the sword. The new captain Gill, said to be a mix of his two predecessors Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, too talks about being positive and playing to win. At Headingley, on Tuesday, reputations will be at stake.
𝗖 𝗛 𝗔 𝗠 𝗣 𝗜 𝗢 𝗡 𝗦 𝗧 𝗨 𝗙 𝗙 🫡🙌🏻
After missing out in the first innings, @klrahul makes it count in the second! A priceless century that puts #TeamIndia in a commanding position in the 1st Test! 🇮🇳#ENGvIND 1st Test Day 4 LIVE NOW Streaming on JioHotstar 👉… pic.twitter.com/FVrutSIABd
— Star Sports (@StarSportsIndia) June 23, 2025
Had it not been for Rahul, India's Man Friday these days, England would have had it easy. Rahul has always excelled on these shores, this was his third Test hundred in England. His is a rarest of rare Test career graph. Rahul has just one hundred at home and more in England and South Africa. Today's knock showed why Rahul does well on pitches with life.
Minutes after Gill was out trying to guide a sharply rising ball from Brydon Crase to third man with a slightly horizontal bat chop, the pundits were asking the producers to get the split screen ready. This was to compare Shubman to Rahul and how they play the same ball. To a similarly rising ball outside off, unlike Shubman, Rahul would present a vertical bat and change the angle to guide behind. The pictures showed Rahul was more in control of the shot than Shubman.
There was another marked difference between the two. Rahul all through his innings, kept his hands close to the body and merely pushed at the ball. Since stepping into England, his bat speed has been controlled. He has not been hurried or edgy. Rahul in the two innings here has been subtle and sure.
It was this tightness of technique that helped him deal with that crack outside the off-stump towards the Howard Stand. There was one patch of rough in the good length area from where the ball would suddenly take off. Rahul had to deal with the unexpected and ugly bounce at least 4 times but he was up to it. Watching the ball closely he would remove himself from the line, withdraw the bat at the last microsecond, play with soft hands to make it drop well short of slip or even let it hit the body. Pant, a left-hander, didn't face the problem as it was outside his leg-stump.
With the pitch showing cracks and rough, England's lone spinner Shoaib Bashir too was a threat. Rahul's method to negate him was different from Pant. The off-spinner would repeatedly bowl to Rahul around the off-stump and keep the cover region vacant. It was an invite to drive with the slip waiting for any mishit. Rahul wasn't going to be extravagant, like Pant. Picking the ball that was drivable, he would allow his left foot to go out to reach the ball and give a firm push to it. On Headingley's fast outfield, the balls didn't need to be clobbered, good timing was enough to take them past the boundary line. That has been the crux of Rahul's batting and his many drives through the off-side.
POV: You are looking at @klrahul's masterclass 🏏
He has gone past his fifty & looks rock solid at the crease, with vice-captain @RishabhPant17 at the other end.#ENGvIND 1st Test Day 4 LIVE NOW Streaming on JioHotstar 👉 https://t.co/4duAvChJD5 pic.twitter.com/DXBL0yqMN0
— Star Sports (@StarSportsIndia) June 23, 2025
Not just in front of the wicket, Rahul would also exploit the point area with his decisive cut shot. When Bashir, or even Stokes, bowled short on the off-side, he would cut the ball firmly. It was the shot he played very often this IPL. After he dragged India out of trouble, Rahul played a tired shot on his 247th ball. It came after he had batted for close to six hours. Ironically, it was a rising ball from Crase, similar to the one that got Shubman. Rahul tried to cut but the ball got his edge and hit the stumps.
Rahul was dropped once but he maintained his poise. He passed his calm to Pant. He hand-held him with sensitivity. Rahul allowed his usual madness but checked him from going bonkers.

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


News18
24 minutes ago
- News18
Rishabh Pant Equals Record Of Hitting Most Sixes In A Test In England
Last Updated: Pant hammered 12 fours and 6 sixes for India in the first innings of the first Test and smacked 15 fours and 3 sixes in the second innings. Rishabh Pant scored 134 runs from 178 balls for India in the first innings of the first Test currently underway at Headingley in Leeds and amassed a total of 118 runs from 140 balls in the second. The left-handed wicketkeeper-batter hammered 12 fours and 6 sixes in the first innings and smacked 15 fours and 3 sixes in the second innings on Monday (June 23). A total of nine sixes in the ongoing match helped Pant equal the record of hitting the most sixes in a Test match played in England. Before Pant, Andrew Flintoff (vs Australia in Edgbaston in 2005) and Ben Stokes (vs Australia at Lord's in 2023) also scored nine sixes in a Test match in England. Pant, who is India's leading six hitter in the World Test Championship (WTC), overall has hit 82 maximums in 44 Test matches played so far. Apart from equalling the record of hitting the most sixes in a Test match played on English soil, Pant broke many other batting milestones as well on Monday. He became the first Indian wicketkeeper-batter to score twin centuries in a Test match. Before him, only one wicketkeeper (Andy Flower of Zimbabwe) has scored twin centuries in a Test match. Pant is the overall seventh Indian batter, after Vijay Hazare, Sunil Gavaskar (3 times), Rahul Dravid (2 times), Virat Kohli, Ajinkya Rahane, and Rohit Sharma, to score twin centuries in a Test match. Pant has scored four Test centuries in England, which also helps him equal Matt Prior's record of most Test centuries in England by a wicketkeeper-batter. Keepers with most 100s in Tests In the list of wicketkeeper-batters with the most Test centuries, Pant, who has crossed the 100-run mark eight times, is only behind Adam Gilchrist (17) and Flower (12). First Published:


India Gazette
28 minutes ago
- India Gazette
KL admits being hurt by his Test batting average, explains recent mindset shift following Leeds masterclass
Leeds [UK], June 24 (ANI): Following his brilliant century at Leeds, Indian wicketkeeper-batter KL Rahul spoke on his mindset shift in international cricket over the last few months, saying that now he is in a space of enjoying hitting balls instead of being in 'quality of over quantity mindset.' KL continued his masterful run in South Africa, England, New Zealand and Australia (SENA) conditions, slamming his third century in England and his sixth in SENA countries. His century and 195-run stand with Rishabh Pant increased India's second innings lead to 370 runs, setting a 371-run target for the hosts to win. Speaking after the match, as quoted by Sky Sports, KL said that earlier, he was not able to convert his starts to big scores. But now, he is not chasing numbers anymore and feels much calmer in his head. 'I am just getting runs now. There was a time when I was just getting starts, but not converting those to big scores in Tests especially. This stage of cricket I am at, journey I am at, a lot has changed. I am much calmer in my head and not chasing numbers. I am just enjoying my cricket as much as I can,' he said. Rahul credited former assistant coach Abhishek Nayar for his collaborative effort during the last 15-18 months with him on his batting. 'I have worked a lot with him, spent a lot of time with him in 15-18 months. I have gone back to basics, doing time. There was a time when I was in a quality over quantity mindset in international cricket and did not hit enough balls. Now I am back to enjoying hitting a lot of balls in the nets,' he added. It has been a nice few months this year for KL Rahul, who has aced a variety of roles across all formats. For India, he primarily played a role of a rock-solid number five in ODIs leading up to the 2023 Cricket World Cup and during the marquee tournament, he racked up 452 runs in 11 matches, with a century and two fifties. He also smashed a 62-ball ton against Netherlands, India's fastest in WC history. However, after the World Cup, he took a predominantly number six finisher role, contributing useful knocks. During the ICC Champions Trophy win for India, he aced the role to perfection, scoring 140 in four innings at an average of 140.00 and a strike rate of 97.90. During semifinals and finals against Australia and New Zealand, he produced solid knocks of 42* and 34*. Then, during the Indian Premier League (IPL), he scored 539 runs in 13 innings at an average of 53.90, with a strike rate of 149.72, his best since the 2018 season, when it was over 158. Playing as an opener and at number three and four as well, KL contributed a century and three fifties. He finished as the ninth-highest run-getter in the tournament, representing Delhi Capitals (DC). Since the Test tour of Australia last year, KL has shifted back to his usual opening spot in Tests, delivering some solid returns. Since then, he has played five Tests as an opener, scoring 431 runs in 10 innings at an average of 47.88, with a century and two fifties. While he has had some success as a middle-order bat, he has been at his best as an opener, with 2,982 runs in 49 Tests and 85 innings at an average of 36.36, with eight tons and 14 fifties. KL also admitted that he does feel 'hurt a lot' on looking at his batting average of 34.70, but he is not in a space of looking at numbers anymore. In 59 Tests, he has scored 3,436 runs with nine centuries and 17 fifties in 103 innings and his best score of 199. Despite possessing an extremely sound technique and a wide array of shots, the batter has come under fire for his puzzling inconsistency. However, his seven overseas centuries out of nine speak volumes about his ability to perform in a variety of conditions. 'I do not look at numbers, but I want to make an impact whenever and wherever I am given a chance. I want to enjoy my cricket. I enjoy playing Test cricket. That is what I loved growing up, and I have got the opportunity to do so for India,' he added. Speaking on how the Test is shaping up to be on the final day for defending 371 runs, KL said that it looks 'blockbuster'. He also expects cracks to open up on the final day on the pitch. 'I think it is a perfect day-five wicket for us to bowl on. It is a blockbuster for us. 'When the Test match started, I felt like it was a good batting wicket and it would be a draw, but there has been some good wear and tear, so we are hoping tomorrow the cracks open up and hopefully it will be an interesting match,' he said. KL also admitted that the wicket was not as easy to bat on like the first innings and it gives India a chance to be in the game. 'It has been up and down for us, and the wicket has been playing tricks,' he concluded. Coming to the ongoing Leeds Test, in pursuit of a 371-run target, Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett ensured England walked out of day four unscathed to set up the final day of the opening Test perfectly against India at Headingley. England ended Day 4 with 21/0 in six overs, with the opening pair Crawley and Duckett unbeaten with scores of 12(25) and 9(11), respectively. Crawley and Duckett ensured England walked out unscathed, setting up an enthralling final day of the series opener, leaving them 350 runs shy of victory. In reply to 371, Crawley and Duckett focused on preserving their wicket and didn't engage in a shot that threatened a wicket loss. Crawley creamed Mohammed Siraj for back-to-back boundaries, which allowed England to finish on a high and stay in the race towards a remarkable victory. Before England came out to bat in the final session, India's long-standing Achilles heel was again exposed by England's pace attack, which was bereft of experience. From 349/6 to 364, the tourists' bottom end was cleaned up in five overs. The collapse began with Brydon Carse rattling the timber to send KL Rahul back to the dressing room on 137(247). The Headingley crowd stood on its feet and applauded Rahul's masterclass. In the next over, Karun Nair dispatched the ball back to Chris Woakes's hands, marking the opening of the floodgates. Josh Tongue punched Shardul Thakur and Mohammed Siraj's return ticket on successive deliveries. Jasprit Bumrah denied Tongue a hat-trick, but the 27-year-old had the last laugh and rattled timber on the next delivery. Ravindra Jadeja waited for the opportunity and embraced it in the 95th over. He heaved the ball powerfully past the leg-side boundary rope for a maximum. He pulled the ball away on the next delivery and creamed Tongue for a four to add valuable runs. India's last resistance eventually gave in after Prasidh Krishna, responsible for holding one end, gave in to his attacking instincts and tried to take on England's sole frontline spinner, Shoaib Bashir. He swiped the ball across the line but failed to get the desired distance. Tongue sprinted and got hold of the ball to conclude India's innings on 364. The batting calamity of India resonated in the difference between the top five batters and the bottom six. India's first half was the prime weapon with the bat and accumulated 721 runs, courtesy of five centuries. At the same time, the rest could only muster 65 runs and added to India's agony. Before an enthralling final session, at Tea, India were 298/4, with KL Rahul (120*) and Karun Nair (4*) unbeaten. Pant scored 118 runs in the second innings, his second ton in the match, and consolidated the innings with a crucial 195-run partnership with KL Rahul. India started the second session at 153/3, with Pant (31*) and KL (72*) unbeaten. The duo launched a brilliant counter-attack against English bowling, taking them to their respective centuries, with Pant dismissed for 118 in 140 balls, with 15 fours and three sixes. India ended the first session at 153/3, with vice-captain Rishabh Pant (31*) and KL Rahul (72*) unbeaten. Despite Carse striking early, removing Shubman for just eight and sinking India to 92/3, Team India managed to give themselves a solid platform to go all guns out blazing for the remainder of the match, but not without giving England some chances. The final session on day three was cut short due to rain. Rahul was joined by skipper Shubman Gill, who was unbeaten on 6*. India ended at 90/2. Brief Scores: India: 471 and 364 (KL Rahul 137, Rishabh Pant 118, Brydon Carse 2/62) vs England 21/0 (Zak Crawley 12*, Ben Duckett 9*). (ANI)


India Gazette
28 minutes ago
- India Gazette
"An element of sharp cricket brain..": Shastri on Pant's counter-attack at Leeds
Leeds [UK], June 23 (ANI): Former Indian cricketer and head coach Ravi Shastri has hailed wicketkeeper-batter Rishabh Pant's audacious century in the second innings at Leeds against England, saying that there is an ' element of a sharp cricket brain' behind Pant's batting. Pant and KL's second-innings centuries put India in a dominant position as the second innings lead swelled over 300, setting up for an exciting finish on the final day at Leeds. While KL's ton was much more calm, composed and defined by technique, Pant delivered box-office cricket with his aggressive brand of batting. Accoridng to Sky Sports, Shastri said Pant's knock has given India a lot of food for thought. 'There is plenty of food for thought, but India will be very happy after a technical masterpiece from Rahul and the flamboyance and exuberance that you can imagine from Pant.' 'People say Pant's batting defies logic, but there is an element of a sharp cricket brain behind it. He knows when to counterattack,' he added. Shastri said Pant could have had a double-digit of Test centuries had he converted his seven dismissals in 90s to triple figures. Coming to the match, at Tea, India were 298/4, with KL Rahul (120*) and Karun Nair (4*) unbeaten. Pant scored 118 runs in the second innings, his second ton in the match, and consolidated the innings with a crucial 195-run partnership with KL Rahul. India started the second session at 153/3, with Pant (31*) and KL (72*) unbeaten. The duo launched a brilliant counter-attack against English bowling, taking them to their respective centuries, with Pant dismissed for 118 in 140 balls, with 15 fours and three sixes. India ended the first session at 153/3, with vice-captain Rishabh Pant (31*) and KL Rahul (72*) unbeaten. Despite Carse striking early, removing Shubman for just eight and sinking India to 92/3, Team India managed to give themselves a solid platform to go all guns out blazing for the remainder of the match, but not without giving England some chances. The final session on day three was cut short due to rain. Rahul was joined by skipper Shubman Gill, who was unbeaten on 6*. India ended at 90/2. England started the second session at 327/5, with Harry Brook (57*) and Jamie Smith (29*) unbeaten. Brook continued his counter-attack, while Smith (40 in 52 balls, with five fours and a six), Chris Woakes (38 in 55 balls, with three fours and two sixes) and Brydon Cwefarse (22 in 23 balls, with four boundaries) also piled up useful scores. Brook missed out on his century, scoring 99 in 112 balls, with 11 fours and two sixes, with Prasidh Krishna getting him caught by Shardul Thakur at deep backwards square leg. A 55-run stand between Woakes and Carse took England past the 400-run mark, and they threatened to surpass India's first innings total before Jasprit Bumrah came in clutch. Bumrah (5/83) and Prasidh Krishna (3/128) were the top bowlers as England was bowled out for 465. England kickstarted the first session of the day at 209/3, with Ollie Pope (100*) and Brook (0*) unbeaten. While Prasidh struck early to remove Pope (106 in 137 balls, with 14 fours), Brook stitched a 51-run stand with skipper Ben Stokes (20 in 52 balls) and a 73-run stand with Smith, taking England well beyond the 300-run mark at session end. A century by Ollie Pope (106 in 137 balls, with 14 fours) and fifty from Ben Duckett (62 in 94 balls, with nine fours) on day two served as valuable contributions as well. Brief Scores: England: 465 (Ollie Pope 106, Harry Brook 99, Jasprit Bumrah 5/83) vs India: 471 and 298/4: KL Rahul 120*, Rishabh Pant 118, Brydon Carse 2/62). (ANI)