logo
Michael Vaughan ‘staggered' by England's decision to bowl first against India

Michael Vaughan ‘staggered' by England's decision to bowl first against India

Independent4 hours ago

Former England captain Michael Vaughan was 'staggered' by Ben Stokes ' decision to put India in on day one of the Rothesay Test series at Headingley.
The tourists enjoyed a dream start to this summer's five-match main event, taking control with a commanding total of 359 for three as Yashavi Jaiswal (101) and new captain Shubman Gill (127no) made themselves at home in Yorkshire.
England's batters would have been forgiven for wishing it was them piling up the runs on a friendly surface, rather than chasing the ball around in 28 degree heat, and would have had the chance had Gill called correctly.
Like Stokes he planned to bowl first, following a trend that has seen six successive victories at this ground by the team who took the the field.
But Vaughan, who grew up playing his cricket here for Yorkshire, was still surprised to see his successor gamble against long-term convention.
'I'm an old school traditionalist here at Leeds: when the sun is shining, with dry weather, you bat,' he said.
'I was staggered when he said he was going to bowl. Traditions are out the window. You look at the England side and their strength is in the batting. There is inexperience in the bowling at the moment, but Ben clearly had a gut feeling, and sometimes that has worked.'
Vaughan also cautioned against marking the game down as a guaranteed run-fest, pointing to the presence of the inimitable Jasprit Bumrah in the away dressing room.
Backed by a big chunk of scoreboard pressure, the paceman is likely to pose a serious threat regardless of conditions.
'We won't know for sure until we see Jasprit Bumrah bowl on it,' said Vaughan.
'He can bowl you out with anything. Until I see that, I will hold my judgment on how flat this pitch is.'
With England wearied by their work, they sent out short-term bowling consultant Tim Southee to make their case.
The recently retired New Zealander, who has taken over the mentoring role following James Anderson's return to county cricket, said: 'When you win the toss and bowl you expect to make early inroads but the Indian openers negotiated that first hour or so pretty well.
'If there was a little bit of moisture left in it, it was probably going to be this morning. You look at the surface and make the decision based on what you think will give you the best chance. Not all the the time do you get it right. But credit to the Indian batsmen, in particular Jaiswal and Gill, they played a couple of great hands.'
Jaiswal, who continued his dominant form against an England side he took for 712 runs in the previous series on Indian soil, was jubilant.
'It was very special, it meant a lot to me,' he said.
'I just wanted to get in and do something for my team, for my country and for myself after the work I have put it. I loved it.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

England stay patient after decision to ask India to bat backfires as bowling coach Tim Southee puts his faith in new ball and 'X-factor' Ben Stokes
England stay patient after decision to ask India to bat backfires as bowling coach Tim Southee puts his faith in new ball and 'X-factor' Ben Stokes

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

England stay patient after decision to ask India to bat backfires as bowling coach Tim Southee puts his faith in new ball and 'X-factor' Ben Stokes

England bowling coach Tim Southee invited judgment to be reserved until both teams have batted after a 'tough' opening day against India at Headingley. Not since Nasser Hussain inserted Australia in the 2002-03 Ashes has a toss decision at the start of a five-match series been scrutinised as heavily as that of Ben Stokes. Just as in Brisbane, when the hosts piled up 364 for two, the opening hours featured two centurions in Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal as England did not make use of what moisture there was in the pitch. 'It was a tough day, but we will get our opportunity to bat soon,' said Southee after India hit 359 for three. 'When you win the toss and bowl you expect to make early inroads, but the Indian openers negotiated the first hour pretty well. Once the wicket flattened, it was a pretty good surface. 'We have a job to do with the second new ball and then there are a few batters who will be keen to get out there.' Only nine balls Gill faced would have gone on to hit the stumps, but Southee highlighted how the favoured mode of dismissal of Chris Woakes and Brydon Carse is caught behind, leading to them operating outside off-stump. With others offering little threat, it was left to Stokes to provide two breakthroughs, striking in each of two spells that made up figures of two for 43. After two hamstring tears in 2024, the 34-year-old is back as an all-rounder, but England fans will not want him to overdo things in an Ashes year. 'There's always a question around that with the injuries he's had, but he's a player that makes things happen, a real X-factor player, and we saw that,' added Southee. 'When he's doing that it's tough to get the ball out of his hand. He's out there making the calls, so if he's feeling like he's threatening he's going to bowl. It's as well as I have seen him bowl for a while.'

Bettys loaf cake, beer snakes and polite applause are the perfect antidote to football's tribal toxicity: OLIVER HOLT spends a day basking in the cricket at Headingley
Bettys loaf cake, beer snakes and polite applause are the perfect antidote to football's tribal toxicity: OLIVER HOLT spends a day basking in the cricket at Headingley

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Bettys loaf cake, beer snakes and polite applause are the perfect antidote to football's tribal toxicity: OLIVER HOLT spends a day basking in the cricket at Headingley

Summer started on a heavy, hot day in Leeds on Friday. It started with the morning sun glinting off the Leeds and Liverpool Canal and cricket supporters striding happily along the towpath through its Victoriana, past Granary Wharf and Monk Bridge Viaduct, towards the cathedral of Headingley, on the hill. It started with a bacon and sausage butty from Ugly Mugs Cafe on St Michael's Lane, opposite the ground, already busy more than two hours before the first ball of this Test summer was bowled, the summer that is a prelude to an Ashes winter in Australia, the summer when Bazball is being told to grow up or go home. Ugly Mugs is David Lloyd's pre-match eatery of choice and there is an item called Rob Burrow's Number 7 on the menu, in honour of one of Leeds' favourite sons. It is a place to watch the cricket walk by. 'You just missed Harry Brook,' one of the customers said to no one in particular, as he peered over the mountain of his full English from one of the outside tables. Queues had already started to form outside the gates. Signs pointed us to summer, too. They pointed to familiar, comforting names such as the Kirkstall Lane End. Inside, the great expanse of the Western Terrace lay empty and expectant and daunting, ready for its bacchanal. The nets were up on the outfield and there was the smack of ball on bat, and the buzz of broadcasters doing pieces to camera. Ben Stokes was on the front cover of the programme, with his collar turned up, and on the desks in the press room there were pieces of loaf cake from Bettys in Harrogate that had been 'steeped' in Yorkshire Tea. And Bumble was here now and Michael Atherton and Nasser Hussain, broadcasters who have done so much to illustrate their game with colour and life and beauty and complexity. On the field, Stokes won the toss and said, 'We'll have a bowl', and the hum grew a little louder. Some looked up at the sky and saw it was blue and wondered at the wisdom of the decision. Others pointed out that the previous six Tests on this ground had all been won by the team bowling first. Music from a DJ booth called Punjabi Roots drifted over the ground. Yashasvi Jaiswal pushed the first ball of the day from Chris Woakes judiciously away, left the next four and then guided the final delivery through gully to the third man boundary for four. It was the start of a day of elegance and admiration. Jaiswal was a joy to watch. He gave a first hint of what was to come with a sumptuous drive through mid-off from the penultimate ball of Woakes's second over. Soon after, he carved Brydon Carse like a dish fit for the gods, viciously through point to the boundary. Soon, it started to feel as if maybe India were not going to miss Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma quite as much as everyone had thought. Jaiswal and KL Rahul drove and cut with majesty. Stokes offered some resistance, as Stokes always does. England's captain is never less than a force of nature and he removed India's debutant, Sai Sudharsan, for a duck with the last ball before lunch. It was only a brief reprieve. By mid-afternoon, as India began to accelerate away from their hosts, Stokes's decision to put them in started to excite comparisons with Hussain's decision to bowl against Australia at the Gabba in 2002. That didn't end well. On the evidence of the first day, at least, neither will this. But this is only the opening skirmish. Just the first day of summer. England were strong favourites to win this series before the start, so this was just the start this five-Test challenge needed. The first signs are that it will be a battle royal. The crowd seemed to recognise that, too. When Jaiswal was finally dismissed for 101, clean bowled by Stokes, after tea, the crowd crammed on to the Western Terrace — even those involved in the patient building of a gargantuan beer snake — stood to applaud him as he headed back towards the pavilion. That kind of generosity is not uncommon in cricket but after another season of football's endless toxicity and relentless tribalism, it still felt like a cool breeze in the stifling heat of the afternoon. It was not England's day but it was impossible not to appreciate the feast India were serving up. Nor did they relent. Shubman Gill, who some had expected to wilt under the pressure of being the new India captain, ended the day unbeaten on 127. He brought up his century with a stunning cover drive off the bowling of Josh Tongue. It was a sobering day for England's bowlers. Their attack looked light and ineffectual. Maybe Jofra Archer will be back for the second Test at Edgbaston. England need him. Mark Wood is sorely missed, too. His return will take longer. There was no flurry of wickets before stumps. Rishabh Pant took his turn to cut loose. He clubbed his second ball of the day back over Stokes's head for four. Stokes grinned broadly. Game recognised game. In the final overs, Pant hoiked a six high over the midwicket boundary off the bowling of Woakes, as India raced towards 359 for three at the close.

Michael Vaughan ‘staggered' by England's decision to bowl first against India
Michael Vaughan ‘staggered' by England's decision to bowl first against India

The Independent

time4 hours ago

  • The Independent

Michael Vaughan ‘staggered' by England's decision to bowl first against India

Former England captain Michael Vaughan was 'staggered' by Ben Stokes ' decision to put India in on day one of the Rothesay Test series at Headingley. The tourists enjoyed a dream start to this summer's five-match main event, taking control with a commanding total of 359 for three as Yashavi Jaiswal (101) and new captain Shubman Gill (127no) made themselves at home in Yorkshire. England's batters would have been forgiven for wishing it was them piling up the runs on a friendly surface, rather than chasing the ball around in 28 degree heat, and would have had the chance had Gill called correctly. Like Stokes he planned to bowl first, following a trend that has seen six successive victories at this ground by the team who took the the field. But Vaughan, who grew up playing his cricket here for Yorkshire, was still surprised to see his successor gamble against long-term convention. 'I'm an old school traditionalist here at Leeds: when the sun is shining, with dry weather, you bat,' he said. 'I was staggered when he said he was going to bowl. Traditions are out the window. You look at the England side and their strength is in the batting. There is inexperience in the bowling at the moment, but Ben clearly had a gut feeling, and sometimes that has worked.' Vaughan also cautioned against marking the game down as a guaranteed run-fest, pointing to the presence of the inimitable Jasprit Bumrah in the away dressing room. Backed by a big chunk of scoreboard pressure, the paceman is likely to pose a serious threat regardless of conditions. 'We won't know for sure until we see Jasprit Bumrah bowl on it,' said Vaughan. 'He can bowl you out with anything. Until I see that, I will hold my judgment on how flat this pitch is.' With England wearied by their work, they sent out short-term bowling consultant Tim Southee to make their case. The recently retired New Zealander, who has taken over the mentoring role following James Anderson's return to county cricket, said: 'When you win the toss and bowl you expect to make early inroads but the Indian openers negotiated that first hour or so pretty well. 'If there was a little bit of moisture left in it, it was probably going to be this morning. You look at the surface and make the decision based on what you think will give you the best chance. Not all the the time do you get it right. But credit to the Indian batsmen, in particular Jaiswal and Gill, they played a couple of great hands.' Jaiswal, who continued his dominant form against an England side he took for 712 runs in the previous series on Indian soil, was jubilant. 'It was very special, it meant a lot to me,' he said. 'I just wanted to get in and do something for my team, for my country and for myself after the work I have put it. I loved it.'

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