
England rally after Pant heroics to set up thrilling finish to India opener
England, with all their wickets standing, will head into Tuesday's final day needing a further 350 runs to reach a target of 371 as they bid to go 1-0 up in a five-match series.
India were threatening to bat England out of the game while Pant, who made 134 in the first innings, completed a 130-ball century, including 13 fours and two sixes, before falling for 118.
The swashbuckling wicketkeeper received excellent support from opener Rahul, who made 137 in a fourth-wicket partnership of 195 that started when India were faltering at 92-3 in their second innings.
But from the relative safety of 333-4, India lost their last six wickets for 31 runs as they slumped to 364 all out.
Fast bowler Josh Tongue did the bulk of the damage in a burst of three wickets in four balls.
Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett survived a potentially tricky six-over spell to take England to 21-0 at stumps.
'Blockbuster finish'
"It's a blockbuster finish waiting tomorrow (Tuesday)," Rahul told Sky Sports after stumps.
He added: "Someone's got to win tomorrow, it'll be an interesting day. The wicket is not as easy as the first innings, they (England) won't find it as easy to hit the ball on the rise.
"Even if they get a big partnership, if we get a couple of wickets we'll be right in the game."
Tongue, meanwhile was proud of England's resilience, saying: "It's very exciting. To get them all out at the end of the day and to not lose a wicket was crucial."
Tongue, who finished with innings figures of 3-72 in 18 overs, added: "I do enjoy bowling at the tail, it's a good opportunity to get wickets."
India also collapsed in the first innings. Despite hundreds from captain Shubman Gill, Pant and Yashasvi Jaiswal, they were dismissed for 471 after losing their last seven wickets for 41 runs.
The outstanding Jasprit Bumrah, the world's top-ranked Test bowler, took five wickets in England's first-innings 465 and will be the danger man for India on Tuesday.
England, however, have succeeded in pulling off some dramatic run-chases in their 'Bazball' era under coach Brendon McCullum and captain Ben Stokes
They reached a target of 378 -- their record successful fourth-innings chase in Test cricket -- against a Bumrah-led India attack at Edgbaston three years ago.
Pant is just the second wicketkeeper in Test history to score hundreds in both innings of the same match following Andy Flower's scores of 142 and 199 not out for Zimbabwe against South Africa in 2001.
After a morning session in which India skipper Gill was the only batsman dismissed, Rahul and Pant upped the tempo in their contrasting styles.
Pant completed an 83-ball fifty before driving Shoaib Bashir for two soaring sixes in three balls.
Rahul took 202 balls to reach his century, featuring 13 fours, with a trademark cover-drive -- his ninth hundred in 59 Tests.
Pant, severely injured in a life-threatening car crash in December 2022, was stuck in the 90s before a quick single took him to his century.
Rahul eventually played on to Brydon Carse before Tongue dismissed Shardul Thakur and Mohammed Siraj with successive deliveries.
Bumrah survived the hat-trick but was bowled next ball by Tongue with Prasidh Krishna out for a duck as well when he holed out off Bashir to end the innings.
© 2025 AFP

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


France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
England lay foundation for victory charge against India
England were 117-0 at lunch at Headingley on Tuesday, needing a further 254 runs to reach a target of 371, with Crawley 42 not out and Duckett unbeaten on 64. The closest India came to separating the pair was just before the interval when Bumrah, in his second spell, dropped an exceptionally tough low, left-handed caught and bowled chance from Crawley's drive. If England achieve their target, it will be just behind their record fourth-innings chase of 378 against India at Edgbaston three years ago. And it would be the second-highest chase in a Test at Headingley, surpassing their 362-9 against Australia in 2019 when current captain Ben Stokes' unbeaten century secured a stunning one-wicket Ashes win. England resumed on 21-0 -- needing exactly 350 more runs to go 1-0 up in this five-match series. Crawley (12 not out) and Duckett (nine not out) were confronted with the daunting task of facing Bumrah, the world's top-ranked Test bowler and fresh from a five-wicket haul in the first innings, in overcast conditions. It was not long before Bumrah got a ball to jag sharply past the outside edge of Duckett's bat. But India squandered a review when Mohammed Siraj tried to overturn an lbw verdict in favour of Crawley, on 21, when replays indicated the ball would have missed leg stump. The openers managed just 42 runs in Tuesday's first 12 overs -- a relatively sedate run-rate in England's aggressive 'Bazball' era. But they denied India a breakthrough in a session where they scored 96 runs in 24 overs. England cashed in on the other members of the India attack as left-hander Duckett drove and pulled Prasidh Krishna for two boundaries on his way to a 66-ball fifty including eight fours. India's Rishabh Pant had become only the second wicketkeeper to score two hundreds in a Test when he made 118 on Sunday to follow his first-innings 134. But, despite five individual centuries in this match, India would have been in an even stronger position had they not suffered collapses of 7-41 and 6-31 at the back end of each innings. © 2025 AFP


France 24
3 hours ago
- France 24
Former India spinner Dilip Doshi dies aged 77
Doshi died in London on Monday, Indian media reported. The left-arm spinner was already in his thirties when he made his Test debut in 1979, and finished with 114 wickets in 33 matches. Doshi also played 15 one-day internationals for India between 1980 and 1982. India batting legend Sachin Tendulkar praised Doshi as a "warm-hearted soul", adding he will "miss those cricketing conversations". Former India all-rounder Ravi Shastri, himself a left-arm spinner, said Doshi was "a gentleman to the core and a fine, fine bowler". The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) also paid tribute to the former spinner. Before play started on the fifth and final day of the first Test between England and India at Headingley on Tuesday, the teams lined up on the outfield to observe a minute's silence in memory of Doshi, with players and officials wearing black armbands as a mark of respect. A bespectacled Doshi carried forward the Indian spin legacy started by the famous quartet of Bishan Singh Bedi, Erapalli Prasanna, Srinivas Venkataraghavan and Bhagwath Chandrasekhar.


France 24
16 hours ago
- France 24
Rishabh Pant: India's unorthodox hero with 'method to his madness'
The 27-year-old became the first Indian to score hundreds in both innings of a Test against England to give his side the edge heading into a fascinating final day of the first of a five-match series. His fourth Test century in England also saw Pant become only the second wicketkeeper in 148 years of Test history, after Zimbabwe's Andy Flower, to score twin centuries in the same match. Having already made 134 in India's first-innings 471, he came out to bat with the game delicately poised in the tourists' second innings at 92-3. True to form, though, Pant went about turning the screw in his own style. He almost knocked himself off his feet when hacking his second ball narrowly over the slip cordon before advancing up the pitch to slap Chris Woakes down the ground. But those shots were as nothing compared to a kneeling slog-sweep off an 87 mile-per-hour (140 kmh) delivery from England fast bowler Brydon Carse. Shoaib Bashir was then dispatched for two sixes in three balls, even if Pant put the breaks on for spells of the early part of his innings. All the while KL Rahul looked on from the other end, the opener's more traditional 137 a counterpoint to vice-captain Pant's whirlwind 118 during a fourth-wicket stand of 195. Rahul -- who took 202 balls for his century, 72 more than Pant needed to reach three figures -- said after stumps: "I've had a few partnerships with Pant. It's hard for us to understand his mindset. "You've got to let Rishabh Pant be Rishabh Pant, there's obviously a method to his madness! He's averaging (around) 45 in Test cricket, there's a lot of thinking behind the outrageous shots he plays." -- $3 million man -- Born in Haridwar, Uttarakhand, Pant's mother would regularly make the four-hour drive so her young son could receive cricket training in the major centre of Delhi, with the pair often staying in a Sikh temple as they could not afford the cost of accommodation. Pant came under the influence of the late Tarak Sinha, a coach who had already launched the likes of Manoj Prabhakar and Shikhar Dhawan on their way to careers as India cricketers. A year after making his debut in India's first-class Ranji Trophy debut aged 18 in 2015, Pant scored a triple-hundred against Maharashtra. He was on his way, with Pant's first Test century coming in just his third match, on the 2018 tour of England. The following year his stunning 159 off 189 balls in a total of 622 in Sydney sealed India's first series win in Australia against an attack used to dominating in home conditions. And in Brisbane in 2021, an unbeaten 89 guided an injury-hit India to their second series win in Australia in two visits as he defied bowlers of the calibre of Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon. However, Pant's promising career and life were nearly cut short in a horror car crash in December 2022 when he had to punch his way out of the overturned vehicle as it burst into flames. After 15 months on the sidelines, many wondered if he would return to the professional game. But his comeback was so successful that Lucknow Super Giants made him the record signing in the Indian Premier League (IPL) when they splashed out $3.21 million for his services at last year's November auction. He arrived in England with questions over his form after striking hust 128 runs in 10 IPL innings this IPL season. But Pant showed his class is permanent by putting England to the sword in some style. © 2025 AFP