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India tour of England 2025: England vs India fifth Test at the Oval day 4 on August 3, 2025

India tour of England 2025: England vs India fifth Test at the Oval day 4 on August 3, 2025

The Hindu4 days ago
Mohammed Siraj struck again for India before England's Harry Brook counter-attacked in style as a dramatic fifth and deciding Test at the Oval remained in the balance on Sunday (August 3, 2025).
England were 164-3 at lunch on the fourth day, still needing a further 210 runs to reach a huge victory target of 374 that would give them a 3-1 series win.
Joe Root, the world's top-ranked Test batsman, was 23 not out, with Yorkshire teammate Brook riding his luck during an unbeaten 38 featuring four fours and two sixes.
Brook struck 27 runs in the space of eight balls, having come in with England 106-3 after Siraj had stand-in England captain Ollie Pope lbw for 27.
The talented Brook charged down the pitch to loft Akash Deep for an extraordinary six over cover despite heavy cloud cover in London favouring India's quicks.
But he almost holed out to fine leg off Prasidh Krishna only for Siraj, right back on the boundary, unable to stop himself taking a pace backwards when completing the catch. By stepping onto the rope, Siraj transformed a dismissal into another six.
England resumed on 50-1 after Siraj yorked Zak Crawley with the last ball of Saturday's play.
Ben Duckett was 34 not out and Pope, leading England in place of the injured Ben Stokes, yet to face.
Left-hander Duckett was repeatedly beaten by fast bowler Siraj, who has appeared in every match of a gruelling series.
He continued to fend outside off stump and it was no surprise when he fell for 54 after edging an intended drive off Krishna to second slip, with KL Rahul holding a sharp catch to leave England 82-2.
But Pope hit three fours in one Krishna over with an on-drive followed by a clip through midwicket and a forceful pull.
Siraj, however, had Pope plumb lbw for 27 with a ball that kept a touch low and nipped back.
Siraj's 20th wicket of the series made him the leading bowler on either side.
India posted 396 in their second innings on Saturday. Opener Yashasvi Jaiswal made a sparkling 118 and Washington Sundar smashed a quickfire 53 late in the day.
History is against the hosts as no side have made more to win in the fourth innings of a Test at the Oval than England's 263 in a one-wicket victory over Australia in 1902.
But England chased down 371 for a five-wicket win in the opener at Headingley.
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Making a statement No problem, the skipper announced with thunderous effect, backing up 147 in his first innings as Test captain and India's No. 4 with 269 and 161 in the next game in Birmingham. After two Tests and four innings, he had a ridiculous 585 runs; his 430 runs at Edgbaston meant only Graham Gooch (456) had scored more runs in a Test. If ever there is something like a dream start… It was impossible for Gill to match those standards for the duration of the series and there was an inevitable slump — just one score of more than 25 in his last six innings — but the one meaningful effort came in a match-saving cause in Manchester in the second innings of the fourth Test. His six-hour-19-minute 103, allied with K.L. 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In the early stages, and particularly during the fourth innings of the first Test when England made a target of 371 appear reasonably miniscule, Gill wasn't in his element. Far from it. First when openers Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett were flaying the bowling while adding 188, or later with Joe Root and Jamie Smith making merry, Gill looked a little lost and helpless, his cause not helped by his bowlers bowling on both sides of the wicket and making it impossible for him to set even run-denying fields. But by the end of the series, and especially towards the closing stages of the Oval classic on the final morning, he had found a method that he was most comfortable with. Even to the last ball of the two overs in which Gus Atkinson was on strike with an injured Chris Woakes, his dislocated left shoulder in a sling, at the non-striker's end, Gill chose not to bring the field in to deny Atkinson the single and therefore the strike at the start of the next over. His logic was simple — the ball was doing plenty and he'd rather keep the field out and force England to get the remaining 17 runs in singles rather than whittle down the target with a couple of boundaries, which were very much on if the field came in. One can argue with that line of thought, but at least a fair amount of thinking had gone into the approach that his bowlers and the captain himself were most comfortable with. 'Any team in that position, there is always a lot of pressure on the batting team, because it's a one-ball game to get a batter out,' Gill reasons, taking a cue from what he would be most uncomfortable doing in that situation as a batter. The continued overlooking of left-arm wrist-spinner Kuldeep Yadav was a sore point, especially in the games where Bumrah didn't play and because the pitches for most of the series wore a dry look, but in the final analysis, his faith in batting depth paid off. Gill isn't unaware that his captaincy will be judged by the results, but he is losing no sleep over it. 'When your decision go well, people obviously praise you; when they don't go well, I am aware that there are going to be shots taken at me, which I am fine with,' he rationalises, 'because at the end of the day, I know that I made a decision which was the best for our team.' Should 2-2 be put down to beginner's luck? Or is it the beginning of a new chapter in Indian cricket? Watch this space, shall we say?

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