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SL vs BAN: Pathum Nissanka's 187 puts Sri Lanka in strong reply against Bangladesh

SL vs BAN: Pathum Nissanka's 187 puts Sri Lanka in strong reply against Bangladesh

India Today6 hours ago

A career-best 187 by the stylish Pathum Nissanka led Sri Lanka to 368-4 in its first innings on the third day of the opening Test against Bangladesh on Thursday. That left the home team 127 runs adrift of Bangladesh, which had piled up a total of 495 all out.On a featherbed surface, Nissanka produced an innings of sublime timing and poise, the sort that makes connoisseurs purr and opponents wince. Nissanka, whose two previous Test hundreds had come overseas, finally notched his maiden century on home soil.advertisementSL vs BAN , 1st Test Day 3: Highlights
A double hundred looked not just probable, but inevitable. Alas, as it so often does in cricket, the second new ball brought about his downfall. A touch too eager to assert, Nissanka offered a drive too early, left a gap between bat and pad, and was clean bowled by Hasan Mahmud.'I was disappointed with the way I got out,' Nissanka said. "I knew I had to see off the new ball. I thought the shot was on, but it was a good piece of bowling as well."We have been conscious about the run rate. We knew we were not scoring too quickly in the last cycle of the World Test Championship. That is one of the things we wanted to address. I hope we have done that sufficiently in this Test match and we look to keep doing that moving forward.'advertisementDebutant Lahiru Udara, also looking assured during a brisk 29 off 34 balls, peppered the boundary with six well-timed fours before offering a return catch to Taijul Islam off a leading edge.Dinesh Chandimal then stitched together a 157-run stand for the second wicket with Nissanka, his 54 oozing class until a faint tickle down the leg side off Nayeem Hasan ended his stay.The 38-year-old Angelo Mathews, in his final Test appearance, appeared in decent touch during a fluent 39 before falling to Mominul Haque, the part-time spinner luring an edge to wicketkeeper Litton Das.'It was an honour to bat with Angelo,' Nissanka said. 'He is an amazing guy. He has done a lot for the game and has helped me out too.'Captain Dhananjaya de Silva (17 not out) and the versatile Kamindu Mendis (37 not out) then took Sri Lanka to the close of play with an unbroken 37-run partnership. With more batting depth to come and time on its side – should the weather hold – Sri Lanka will fancy its chances of claiming a first-innings lead.Earlier, Sri Lanka wrapped up the Bangladesh innings inside 15 minutes. Asitha Fernando took 4-86 while Milan Rathnayake and Tharindu Rathnayake picked up three wickets apiece.advertisementBangladesh fast-bowling coach Shaun Tait said: "Sri Lanka are a team that was competing for the WTC final six months ago. I think they batted really well. The pace bowlers missed a trick with the new ball. It would have been nice if they had taken a couple of wickets with the new ball.'I think we would have taken our score at the start of the game. We got a good score. We can't ask much more than that from Bangladesh.'

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ENG vs IND, 1st Test: New era. No mercy. Trial by Bazball awaits Gill's NextGen
ENG vs IND, 1st Test: New era. No mercy. Trial by Bazball awaits Gill's NextGen

India Today

time30 minutes ago

  • India Today

ENG vs IND, 1st Test: New era. No mercy. Trial by Bazball awaits Gill's NextGen

"In my entire career so far, I've never walked into a team environment where neither Virat nor Rohit is present," KL Rahul said, reflecting on the changing face of Indian Test India walk out at Headingley on Friday, it won't just be the start of a new World Test Championship cycle. It will also be the beginning of a new chapter - one without three pillars of the previous era: Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and R Ashwin. Their absence marks a quiet but clear turning point, and with it comes Rahul's debut in December 2014 - and even going back to August 2011 - at least one of the trio has featured in every Indian Test. Now, for the first time in over a decade, a new generation takes centre stage. There's no doubt the transition has come quickly. But there's also a sense of excitement. Under Shubman Gill's captaincy, a young and hungry Indian side arrives in England with fresh energy, very little baggage, ready to make its mark. The challenges are real - playing a five-Test series in England always is - but so is the new captain Shubman Gill and his young side, there is no gentle handover. It is a trial by fire. And it begins at Leeds where India haven't played much since their famous win in Gill's appointment as Test captain did raise eyebrows. At 25, and still finding his feet in red-ball cricket, his elevation marks a bold and telling shift in approach from the selectors and team management. A white-ball star, Gill has now been handed the reins in the toughest format, with the hope that responsibility will sharpen his edge rather than weigh him not without precedent. Back in 2014, a 26-year-old Virat Kohli took over a team in transition after MS Dhoni's sudden retirement midway through the Australia series. Kohli rose to the occasion and went on to carve his name among the greats of Indian Test Gill do the same? Why made his ambitions clear. Test captaincy, he said, is the highest honour for a cricketer - and come Friday, he intends to lead with clarity and calm in the dressing room. More than that, he's set himself a goal: to be the best batter in the series. It's a lofty aim, especially given his modest record in overseas conditions. But Gill has never lacked for belief - and that, at times, can be half the battle. It won't be easy. Not for Gill, and not for head coach Gautam Gambhir, who's already under pressure after successive series defeats. India were outplayed at home against New Zealand and on tour in Australia. Gambhir survived, but with England away on the horizon, the leash may not be Gill and Gambhir now have a point to prove. And they'll have to do it with a young, relatively inexperienced squad. KL Rahul, with 58 Tests behind him, is the most seasoned batter. The bowling attack offers a little more familiarity, though Mohammed Shami's absence will be felt. The 19-man squad includes uncapped names like Sai Sudharsan, Abhimanyu Easwaran, and Arshdeep Singh, while Karun Nair and Shardul Thakur are looking to re-establish paper, India still look competitive. But five Tests in England are a different beast, especially against a side that has made home dominance their identity in the Bazball have been ruthless at home in the Bazball era. Since Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum took charge, their ultra-aggressive batting approach has bulldozed opposition sides and made even steep fourth-innings targets look chaseable. India were on the receiving end of that in 2022, and since the Bazball revolution began, England have won 15 of their 20 Tests - a win-loss ratio of 3.75, second only to this series marks England's first major test in the post-Anderson and Broad era. Injuries have further depleted their resources - Jofra Archer and Mark Wood are unavailable, leaving Chris Woakes to lead a relatively inexperienced attack. His new-ball partners, Josh Tongue and Brydon Carse, have just eight Tests between them. Lead spinner Shoaib Bashir, though promising, is still early in his career with 16 Tests under his belt. Captain Stokes, returning from injury, will likely have to shoulder the fifth bowler's vs IND: HEAD-TO-HEAD RECORDSIndia and England have played 136 Tests against each other. India have won 35 of them, lost 51 while 50 of them have ended in a England, India have played 67 Tests and won only nine of them. Two of those wins came in their last tour under Virat Kohli's Headingley, India have played seven Tests, won two and lost vs IND: HEADINGLEY PITCH AND WEATHER CONDITIONSThe pitch at Headingley had a green tinge on the eve of the Test match. Expect a bit of grass covering on the pitch on the opening day, aiding movement for the pacers. Both Gill and Stokes pointed out that the start of the English summer has been drier than normal. However, there is a bit of rain predicted on all five days of the Test match. The overhead conditions will dictate the course of play, but if the weather stays clear, the pitch will progressively get better for batting. Spin might come into play if the weather stays clear and allows the pitch to winning the toss have tended to opt to bowl here. In the last six Tests at the venue, teams bowling first have gone on to win the Test matches.254 for 7, 296 for 3, 362 for 9, 322 for 5 have been the last four successful fourth innings chases at this venue since NEWS: ENG vs IND, 1st TestEngland named their playing XI two days before the Test match. Ollie Pope retains his place in the side ahead of Jacob Bethell while the hosts have gone with three frontline pacer and a PLAYING XI: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, ?Ben Stokes (captain), Jamie Smith (wicketkeeper), Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse, Josh Tongue, Shoaib PREDICTED XI: KL Rahul, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Sai Sudharsan, Shubman Gill (captain), Rishabh Pant (wicketkeeper), Karun Nair, Ravindra Jadeja, Shardul Thakur, Jasprit Bumrah, Arshdeep Singh, Mohammed Gill is set to bat at No. 4, filling the spot long held by Virat Kohli. Vice-captain Rishabh Pant will follow at No. 5, anchoring a middle order in transition. Yashasvi Jaiswal and KL Rahul are likely to open, while India are yet to finalise their No. 3. Sai Sudharsan, Abhimanyu Easwaran, and Karun Nair are all in the back in the Test setup after seven years, appears to be the frontrunner. He scored a double hundred against the England Lions earlier this month and was seen taking slip catches in training, unlike Sudharsan and Easwaran, who had limited net the bowling department, Jadeja, Bumrah, and Siraj pick themselves. The third seamer's slot is likely a toss-up between Akash Deep, Prasidh Krishna, and left-armer Arshdeep Singh. For the fast-bowling all-rounder role, it could come down to Shardul Thakur or Nitish Reddy. Given Bumrah's workload management, Thakur's experience and bowling ability may give him the vs IND, 1st TEST: PLAYERS TO WATCHKL Rahul: Having made his mark in England in 2021-22, the senior-most specialist batter in the side needs to shoulder the burden of scoring big at the top in the absence of Rohit Sharma and Virat Pant: The wicketkeeper-batter, now the vice-captain, needs to find the balance between his natural game and playing according to the demands of the situation. If Pant gets going in the middle-order, India's batting will be a formidable Siraj: After an ordinary series in Australia, Siraj roared back to form in the IPL 2025 season for Gujarat Titans. The Hyderabad pacer will be determined to prove a point in England where he found a lot of success in 2021-22. He needs to step up as Bumrah is all set to play only three of the five Woakes: The seam-bowling all-rounder has been England's most successful bowler after the retirements of Broad and Anderson. If England are to do well in the series opener, Woakes needs to Stokes: All eyes will be on Stokes's body as the skipper might need to bowl those extra overs to give cushion to a young bowling Root: A good start to England's all-time run-getter will set the series up for the hosts. Root's battle against Bumrah, his nemesis, will be one to watch out vs IND, 1st TEST PREDICTIONEngland may hold a slight edge heading into the series opener, but with so many unknowns in this Indian side, don't be surprised if they exceed expectations. You May Also Like

KL Rahul's first words to Shubman Gill the moment he was named India's Test captain: 'You need to give people space'
KL Rahul's first words to Shubman Gill the moment he was named India's Test captain: 'You need to give people space'

Hindustan Times

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  • Hindustan Times

KL Rahul's first words to Shubman Gill the moment he was named India's Test captain: 'You need to give people space'

Team India kick off the new World Test Championship cycle on Friday when the side takes on England in the first match of the five-Test series in Headingley. The match also begins a new era for Indian cricket, with Shubman Gill as captain and Rishabh Pant being named his deputy. With both Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli retiring from the format, India have officially entered a transitional era in Tests, and the side will be aiming to make a strong statement from the outset as they meet Ben Stokes' men. Ahead of the clash, Gill has received words of support from his senior teammate KL Rahul, who has been an integral part of India's red-ball setup for many years. Rahul has led India in select Test matches, too, and is expected to play a key role in India's leadership group to help smooth the transition. Rahul revealed that he communicated to Gill the moment he was announced as India's next Test captain. 'I reached out to Shubman the minute the team was announced, and when he was announced (as) the captain. (I told him) You will always find me around, any help, any guidance, if you need someone to share something with or talk to, I'm always there. But I believe you need to give people their space to really follow their gut instinct. If they need help, I'm always there,' Rahul told Sony Sports Network. The Indian batter also stressed the importance of playing as a unit and promoting collective responsibility for results. 'We have been together. (If) We don't get results our way, somewhere along the way, everyone makes mistakes. That's not going to change. We are going to try and help out everyone in the team. I'm always there,' said the batter. A significant narrative around India's tour of England is built on India's generational transition, and there's no shortage of reasons behind it. In addition to Rohit and Kohli's Test retirements, India are also expected to hand debut caps to multiple players throughout the series. Sai Sudharsan and Arshdeep Singh have received maiden call-ups for the five-match rubber, while Karun Nair, who last played for India in 2017, has also returned to the squad. In their last tour to England in 2021, India led 2-1 after four Tests before the fifth and final match in Manchester was postponed due to Covid-19. England eventually equalised the series the next year.

'If I'm the captain, I would tell Rishabh Pant...': Sachin Tendulkar sounds alarm over India star's 'risky' batting
'If I'm the captain, I would tell Rishabh Pant...': Sachin Tendulkar sounds alarm over India star's 'risky' batting

Hindustan Times

time2 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

'If I'm the captain, I would tell Rishabh Pant...': Sachin Tendulkar sounds alarm over India star's 'risky' batting

Team India will kick off its new World Test Championship cycle on Friday as it takes on Ben Stokes' England in the first Test of the five-match series in England. The series is significant not just in terms of the WTC cycle, but also because it begins India's transitional era in the longest format. With two stalwarts of Indian cricket, Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli, retiring from the format, the series will see a relatively younger Indian team aiming to make its mark in Test cricket. While Shubman Gill leads the side for the first time, Rishabh Pant, the wicketkeeper-batter, will be his deputy. Pant will continue to bat at No. 5 in the Test side, but with added leadership duties, the spotlight on his temperament and approach has only intensified. The dynamic wicketkeeper-batter, long known for his fearless strokeplay, now faces growing calls for maturity, especially in light of the criticism he copped during India's 2024/25 tour of Australia. Pant's tendency to throw his wicket away drew sharp reactions from both fans and former cricketers, with many questioning his decision-making under pressure. Indian legend Sachin Tendulkar has now stressed the need for Pant to evolve; while Tendulkar did encourage Pant to back his instincts, he stressed the southpaw must bat with greater responsibility if he is to fulfil his potential in the longest format. "He [Pant] should back his instincts most of the time," Tendulkar said. 'But there'll be situations where he'll have to curb his game in the interests of the team,' he added, as quoted by ESPNCricinfo. 'I know that whatever he does the rest of the time will also be in the interest of the team, but the approach might have to be different. He has to have that flexibility in his mind. If there are times when you're looking to save the game, then he may have to adapt that defensive approach, for let's say an hour or 45 minutes or sometimes two hours, where he'll have to just take those risky shots out of the game and not be as aggressive. He could be positive, but the shot selection will come into play.' Tendulkar also explained how he would handle Rishabh Pant if he were the Indian captain. He stated that he would allow the wicketkeeper-batter a free hand in his aggressive approach, but if India needed to save the match, he would want Pant to play responsibly. "Nine out of ten times, if I'm the captain, I'll say, 'Just go out and play your game, why worry about anything.' If you're looking to save the game, that is when the approach changes a bit, but otherwise I would tell him that you go out and be yourself and do what you feel is in the best interest of the team," said Tendulkar.

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