Rahul, Gill lead brilliant fightback
MUMBAI, July 27 -- There are going to be tough days in Test cricket when nothing is going right for you, and the opposition is completely on top. After three closely fought games, India had such a poor outing in their first innings of the fourth Test at Old Trafford. By the end of Day 3 with England 186 runs ahead with three wickets in hand in their first innings, they were already too far behind in the game.
The mettle of a good team is seen in how they respond in such situations - throw in the towel or make a statement by fighting till the last ball is bowled. There were alarm bells when India again turned out flat in the field to play a poor opening session on Saturday. Captain Ben Stokes moved fluently to his 14th Test hundred and then added quick runs to ensure a monumental 311-run lead.
Being kept on the field for 157 overs, it can take a toll mentally and physically. India's worst fears came true in the 15 minutes they had to negotiate before lunch on Day 4.
In the very first over, Chris Woakes struck a double blow. The swing bowler produced a beauty to induce an edge off Yashasvi Jaiswal to be caught in the slip. Next ball, Sai Sudharsan was out for a golden duck, hanging out his bat to also be caught in the cordon.
With his team tottering at 0/2, Shubman Gill walked in to bat in the first over itself. It was a real test of nerves for the young captain. There was extra pressure that he had not got runs in the previous three innings. His captaincy in the field had also come under the scanner after allowing England to amass 669, their highest total at Old Trafford.
To his credit, Gill chose the occasion to make a strong statement by stroking a delightful half century. Considering what had happened in the first session, it was an important effort to calm his dressing room.
It was proof he has the steel to handle the tough situation and the skill to negotiate English conditions.
In a superb partnership with the dependable KL Rahul, he put behind the horror start to play through the next two sessions. From two wickets for one run at lunch, India had advanced to 174/2 in 63 overs at stumps.
Rahul was batting on 87 (210 balls, 8 fours) and Gill was 78 not out (167 balls, 10 fours). It is the highest partnership for a stand that started at 0/2.
It is still a long way to go but thanks to the resilient third wicket pair, the lead is now down to 137 and the visitors' dressing room would have started to harbour thoughts of a draw.
During his innings, Gill went past Virat Kohli's 655 runs against England in 2016. He is on 697 runs now. Rahul has crossed 500 runs for a series for the first time.
With Stokes deciding not to bowl, Chris Woakes, Jofra Archer and Carse kept probing that chink against the incoming ball. Gill though was equal to the task with decisive footwork.
He was hit on his thumb by a rising ball from Archer but put the blow behind and hit some beautifully timed boundaries.
Against Woakes, there were two rasping square cuts and a sublime off-drive, before treating the crowd to back-to-back classical straight drives off Carse.
Meanwhile Rahul, a model of concentration, played late and showed good judgement of his off-stump to leave the balls well.
The pitch was showing signs of wear and tear and Stokes introduced spin early. Dawson's first over was played out cautiously, but Gill continued the counter-attack against the faster bowlers
With Dawson bowling a tight line in his second spell of 12-4-15-0, the two batters were watchful after tea. While Rahul took 141 balls to reach his fifty, with just three fours, he outscored Gill in the final session....
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