logo
IND vs ENG: Joe Root Overtakes Sachin Tendulkar In Major Test Batting Record

IND vs ENG: Joe Root Overtakes Sachin Tendulkar In Major Test Batting Record

India.com2 days ago
England's star batter Joe Root continued his remarkable Test form by surpassing the iconic Sachin Tendulkar to reach a significant milestone in the format. In the previous match in Manchester, Root had already become the second-highest run-scorer in Test cricket history. During the ongoing fifth and final Test of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy at The Oval, he added yet another accolade to his name.
Root has now gone past Tendulkar in the list of most runs scored by a player in Test matches played on home soil. He entered the Oval Test needing just 22 runs to overtake Tendulkar's total of 7,216 runs at home. The landmark moment came in the second session on Day 2, when Root struck a boundary off Mohammed Siraj in the 33rd over. Joe Root came in to bat at No. 4 for England in the first innings of the ongoing fifth Test at The Oval and contributed 29 runs off 45 deliveries, striking six elegant boundaries. Despite the modest score, Root etched his name into the record books once again. The right hand batter has scored 432 runs in 5 matches with one innings left at an impressive average of 61.71.
With this, Root now occupies the second spot on the all-time list of most Test runs scored in a player's home country. The only player ahead of him is former Australian captain Ricky Ponting, who has 7,578 runs in Australia from 92 matches.
Most Test Runs at Home:
1. Ricky Ponting – 7,578 runs in 92 Tests 2. Joe Root – 7,229 runs in 84 Tests\* 3. Sachin Tendulkar – 7,216 runs in 94 Tests 4. Mahela Jayawardene – 7,167 runs in 81 Tests
5. Jacques Kallis – 7,035 runs in 88 Tests
On-Field Incident at The Oval
Tensions rose during the same match when Joe Root was involved in a verbal exchange with Indian pacer Prasidh Krishna. After hitting a boundary, Root appeared displeased with something said by Krishna and walked toward him in protest. The situation escalated, prompting intervention from on-field umpires Ahsan Raza and Kumar Dharmasena. KL Rahul later stepped in to defend his teammate, which led to a heated exchange with Dharmasena, adding more drama to Day 2 of the final Test.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brook and Root's zen-like batting, Indian pace fight back sets up fitting denouement to dramatic Test series at The Oval
Brook and Root's zen-like batting, Indian pace fight back sets up fitting denouement to dramatic Test series at The Oval

First Post

time29 minutes ago

  • 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.

5th Test: Rain Brings Early End To Riveting Day Four, Sets Stage For Thrilling Finish
5th Test: Rain Brings Early End To Riveting Day Four, Sets Stage For Thrilling Finish

India.com

time29 minutes ago

  • India.com

5th Test: Rain Brings Early End To Riveting Day Four, Sets Stage For Thrilling Finish

Bad light and subsequent rain forced an early end to play on Day Four of the fifth Test of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy at The Oval on Sunday. With the stage set for a thrilling day five, England need 35 more runs to win, while India requires four wickets for a miraculous victory. Rain forcing the match to go into the fifth day means every Test of the ongoing riveting five-match series has now gone into the last day. England looked all set to complete the chase of 374 on day four, thanks to Joe Root hitting his 39th Test century off 137 balls, and paid a fitting tribute to Graham Thorpe. While Root eventually made 105 off 152 balls, Harry Brook hit a stunning 111 off 98 balls – his tenth hundred in the longer format and was given a reprieve on 19 by Mohammed Siraj. Just when it felt that victory was inevitable for England, Root and Jacob Bethell fell to Prasidh Krishna as overcast conditions meant India found seam movement and made life difficult for Jamie Smith and Jamie Overton – unbeaten on two and zero respectively. Before India could bring more twists to the game, the rain gods intervened and brought a premature end to the day's play. With Chris Woakes, with his left arm in a sling, pacing up and down in the dressing room in his Test whites, another fascinating day five finish looms large to decide the scoreline of this closely-fought Test series. The final session began with a slight delay due to rain. But once it went away, Root brought up his 39th Test century off 137 balls. From the other end, Jacob Bethell struggled for fluency despite advancing to drive Akash Deep past cover for four, and his stay ended when he went for a big heave, but bottom-edged to his stumps off Prasidh Krishna. Suddenly, things began to grow tighter as Prasidh had Jamie Smith inside-edging to his pads, before beating him on the outside edge. From the other end, Siraj hit Smith and Root on pads with his nip-backers, before India burnt a review when Prasidh hit Root on pads. But India found some hope as Prasidh struck again by having Root edge behind to Dhruv Jurel, who dived to his right to take a good low catch and dismiss the batter for 105. With Smith and Jamie Overton struggling to find gaps, India were well on top before bad light and then heavy rain forced players to go off the field and push the series decider to day five.

Motor racing-Brown hails McLaren's 200th win as close to perfect
Motor racing-Brown hails McLaren's 200th win as close to perfect

Hindustan Times

time29 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Motor racing-Brown hails McLaren's 200th win as close to perfect

By Alan Baldwin HT Image BUDAPEST, Aug 3 (Reuters) - McLaren boss Zak Brown hailed the team's 200th Formula One win, with Lando Norris ahead of championship leader Oscar Piastri in a one-two finish in Hungary on Sunday, as close to perfect. The win was Norris's fifth of the season and McLaren's seventh one-two in 14 races as well as the team's fourth in a row. "You're never perfect in a race but I think that was as close to perfect as you can get," Brown told Sky Sports television. "The drivers were awesome, pit stops amazing, strategy was great to get Lando up there, Oscar drove brilliantly. I couldn't be prouder of this racing team." Norris and Piastri crossed the finish line 0.698 of a second apart, with the pair almost touching when the Australian tried to make a move on his British teammate on the penultimate lap and locked up. Team principal Andrea Stella said it had been 'firm' racing but also fair between rivals now separated by just nine points. "We had a bit of a lock-up with Oscar but at the same time Lando left some space because he knew that Oscar would have been at the limit of braking," said the Italian. "We keep being very proud of our Lando and Oscar for racing. I think this is a great way of honouring Formula One racing. These are the value of McLaren." Despite celebrating his ninth career win, Norris said he needed to improve because he was making life too hard for himself. He won from third on the grid, after dropping to fifth at the start and then making a one-stop strategy work with Piastri on two. "It's going to be a good and tough battle probably until the end. It takes a lot out of you trying to focus so much for every single session, race, everything. So, it's going be a long second half of the season, I'm sure," he said. "There are those things I need to improve on and want to improve on. I'm not giving myself the best opportunities. Even though the results have looked great, I'm not making my life very easy for myself at the minute. "So if I can work on those things, then I'll be in a better place." McLaren are only the second team to chalk up 200 grand prix wins since the world championship started in 1950. Ferrari, yet to win this season, are on 248. Mercedes, next after McLaren, have 130. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Christian Radnedge)

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