
‘Amazing' series shows Test cricket is not dying
With England needing 35 to win with four wickets in hand for a mammoth chase of 374, they took the last four wickets for 28 runs in riotous scenes that instantly earned a place alongside the sport's most cherished moments.
As the tension reached almost unbearable levels, Chris Woakes spent 16 excruciating minutes batting one-handed with a badly dislocated left shoulder. Gus Atkinson protected him from facing a ball but was ultimately unable to protect his own stumps from the indomitable Mohammed Siraj, who etched his name in history with his third wicket of the morning, fifth of the innings and 23rd of the series.
Stokes, who missed the fifth-Test decider with a shoulder injury of his own, hurt for his team but accepted the conclusion was deserved.
'The series as a whole has been pretty much toe to toe for 25 days. From a cricket fan's point of view, 2-2 is probably fair,' he said.
'Two very good teams who have thrown everything at each other and left everything out there. We obviously would have loved to get a series win but it wasn't meant to be.
'We're bitterly disappointed we couldn't get over the line but it was another hard-fought game and both teams put so much energy and effort into the series, it's been an amazing one to be part of.
'There's a little bit of frustration there as well but as a massive advocate of this format and for Test cricket as a whole, this has certainly been one of those series that could hopefully keep off the narrative around 'Test cricket is dying'.'
The game felt like it was won and lost on a number of occasions over the past few days but England looked to have settled it on the third afternoon, when the twin centuries of Joe Root and Harry Brook took them to 301 for three.
From there they lost seven for 66, culminating in the high drama of Woakes' walking wounded cameo.
Stokes paid tribute to his bravery but doubled down on his position that injury substitutes have no part in Test cricket. India's Rishabh Pant batted at Old Trafford with a broken foot and Shoaib Bashir took the winning wicket at Lord's with a broken little finger in his left hand.
For Stokes, who bowled himself out of the series by pushing his body to the edge, that is how it must be.
'I'm sorry to say this but if someone gets injured, tough s***. Deal with it. That's how we view it,' he said.
'I am still heavily against it. It's just sod's law that this has happened the week after I said I was against it, but my view has not changed.
'There was never going to be a question in Woakesy's mind about what he was going to do. He spent yesterday trying to figure out if he was going to be left or right-handed. He was in a lot of discomfort running between the wickets…but he's out there trying to get his team over the line.
'It shows what it is to play for your country and try to win for your country.'
Siraj, who bowled an epic 185.3 overs over the five matches, earned his place in the spotlight as the curtain came down.
'From the first day till the fifth game, fifth day, we have fought an unbelievable fight,' he said.
'God must have written something good for me, that's why I won this match and took the last wicket. When I woke up today, I thought I could do it. I downloaded a picture from Google saying 'believe'.'

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


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
Forest confirm new front-of-shirt sponsor
Nottingham Forest have announced Bally's Corporation, an American gambling, betting and interactive entertainment company, as the new front-of-shirt sponsor for the 2025-26 comes despite Premier League clubs collectively agreeing in 2023 to withdraw gambling sponsorship from the front of their matchday shirts by the end of the 2025-26 have been allowed to secure new shirt-front deals before the deadline and will still be able to continue featuring gambling brands in areas such as shirt sleeves and LED advertising owner Evangelos Marinakis said: "We are on a special journey - we are determined to keep achieving incredible things and strengthening our global partnerships is an important part of this."As our club continues to thrive both on and off the pitch, we're looking forward to working with Bally's on a number of exciting initiatives, helping us to engage with our growing fanbase within Nottinghamshire and around the world."Home shirts with the new sponsor will be worn for the first time in Tuesday's friendly against Serie A side Fiorentina at the City the 2024-25 campaign, 11 top-flight teams had a gambling sponsor on the front of their shirts, an increase of three from the previous ban from next season follows a consultation between the league, its clubs and the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) as part of the government's ongoing review of current gambling legislation.

Rhyl Journal
28 minutes ago
- Rhyl Journal
Intensity of India series will help England in Ashes battle
McCullum was honest enough to chalk up the 2-2 scoreline as a 'fair reflection' on seven weeks of hard-fought, demanding cricket, with India snatching a share of the new Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy with a thrilling six-run win in the decider. That meant England were one big hit away from claiming an outright victory that would have sent them to Australia this winter with the biggest scalp of the 'Bazball' era. India win by 6 runs 💔 The Anderson Tendulkar trophy is shared 🤝 A simply incredible finale to an epic series 👏 — England Cricket (@englandcricket) August 4, 2025 Instead, they will travel having last defeated one of their 'big three' rivals back in Sir Alastair Cook's farewell series in 2018. McCullum will soon begin the job of assessing how and where things could have gone better, with the aim of landing in Perth at the start of November with lessons learned. 'It's been a magnificent series, as good as I've been involved with or witnessed in my time. We played some excellent cricket and at times, with the pressure India put us under, we came up a little bit short,' he said. 'You're always learning any time you get to see guys having to dig deep and go to places they've maybe not been before. 'We'll let this one sit and we'll digest it. We'll be able to pick out what has gone well then start to work out how we can keep improving, so when we do arrive out in Australia we give ourselves a huge chance. 'We're in the middle now, halfway through what we knew was going to be an unbelievable 12 months of Test cricket. We know we've got some room to improve. 'But to be involved in a series of such pressure over a period like this teaches you to be tough and builds resilience within you. A lot of our guys will have learnt a lot and that can only be a good thing.' One thing England may reflect on is their decision to keep the emerging talent of Jacob Bethell in camp for the most of the summer, rather than releasing him to play first-class cricket. He has played just one County Championship match for Warwickshire this year, while travelling as a non-playing squad member with the Test team. When he was called on as Ben Stokes' injury replacement, he made 11 runs in two innings and was dismissed in a pressurised chase playing a wild slog. McCullum refused to chide him for that, though. 'Beth will be back and better for the experience, I'm sure he'll learn from it,' he said. 'The good thing was he took the positive option. The thing people want to be seen to be doing is getting out to a ball in an acceptable manner, but sometimes you've got to be brave enough to be able to try and put some pressure back on the opposition. He got out doing it, but no one ever regretted being positive, right?' Bethell's flat performance means Ollie Pope can breathe a little easier about hanging on to his number-three spot in Australia. After starting the international season with successive hundreds – against Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge and India at Headingley – his numbers tailed off. He finished the series averaging 34 and sat a disappointing 10th on the run-scoring charts. 'There were too many 20s and a 40 in there. You always want more as a batter so it's frustrating that I didn't end up scoring more hundreds on some good surfaces,' said Pope. 'That's probably the difference between a really good series and a so-so series. I feel like I'm a much better player now than I was on my first Ashes trip (in 2020/21). 'Mentally, I'm more equipped to deal with the challenges out there and I know how I want to go about building innings out there. 'Before I felt like I was kind of trying to tinker too much during games, in between games, and probably wasn't quite ready for the challenge four years ago.'

Rhyl Journal
28 minutes ago
- Rhyl Journal
Pope's form, Stokes' fitness and pace options – the questions facing England
There are just over three months until England arrive in Perth and the planning can now begin in earnest. Here, the PA news agency looks at five key questions England need to answer. Will Ben Stokes be fully fit? England are a completely different team when their inspirational captain is firing on all cylinders. He was in brilliant form this summer, rolling back the years with ball in hand, but missed the Kia Oval decider with a shoulder problem. A six-to-10-week lay-off will follow but any further setbacks would raise serious alarms. Having been struck down by knee, hip, hamstring and shoulder injuries in the past two years, is it too optimistic to expect him to be in peak condition throughout a gruelling tour? What is the pace bowling pecking order? England have talked up the importance of building deep reserves of fast bowlers but when the first Test kicks off in Perth they must be clear on their best combination. Jofra Archer looks certain to be in it after his long-awaited comeback, Mark Wood hopes to be back after missing the entire Test season, while Gus Atkinson, Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue, Jamie Overton, Chris Woakes and Sam Cook all played this summer. Woakes looks like missing out with a dislocated shoulder, but how do the others stack up? How do they get the best out of Ollie Pope? A big hundred against Zimbabwe and another century in his first knock against India removed some of the questions that had been circling about Pope's spot at number three. But he finished the series averaging 34 and was 10th on the run-scoring charts. Jacob Bethell's disappointing effort in the fifth Test against India has weakened his case as a replacement but England need more from a senior player in a key position. Could taking the vice-captaincy off him and promoting white-ball skipper Harry Brook be part of the answer? Is the spin situation settled? A lot of faith has been placed in Shoaib Bashir, with England backing their hunch that he can do well in Australia. It has been a mixed bag so far, with 68 wickets in 19 Tests but a stubbornly high average of 39. His broken finger opened the door for them to have an overdue second look at Liam Dawson, but the county scene's standard-bearer was dropped after taking one for 140 at Old Trafford. Will he travel as competition for Bashir, could there be a return to Jack Leach or might England look at using all-pace attacks for some Ashes contests? How will they prepare for the war of words? Australian players, fans and media cheerleaders have been paying close attention to the India series and it is has not been hard to realise the long-range sledging has already started. From David Warner's recent jibe at Joe Root to the social media barrage about the merits, or otherwise, of 'Bazball', the heat is already rising. Expect that to continue all the way until Glenn McGrath shockingly predicts a 5-0 win for Australia. England have refused to entertain much Ashes talk in recent months but the temptation will rise as the weeks tick by. Will they fire some broadsides of their own or keep things on the field?