England v India: third men’s cricket Test, day two – as it happened

A picture


Ali’s report is in so it’s time to say goodbye,Rob Smyth and Jim Wallace will call the shots tomorrow,Get Sky back on: Jimmy Anderson is bowling to Jonny Bairstow in the Roses T20,Here are some pretty mad numbers on Joe Root,Since the start of 2021, he has 5,396 Test runs at an average of 55.

62, with 20 hundreds and 17 half-centuries,Remember when he had that conversion problem? Steve Smith, the second leading run-scorer in that period, has 3,187 runs and 10 hundreds,England playing more than everyone else helps, but that’s still brilliant,The Dukes ball is getting pelters at the moment,Just the 72.

3 overs bowled in the day.I’m not really an overs-rate complainer – the crowd still witnessed some very special moments – but that’s not great.43rd over: India 145-3 (Pant 19, Rahul 53) Bashir twirls for the final time today, tossing the ball way above Pant’s eyeline, trying to invite a moment of madness.Pant resists, as does Rahul.A slow day’s play comes to a close, with India trailing by 242 runs.

42nd over: India 144-3 (Pant 18, Rahul 53) Carse oversteps twice, the only damage from the over.Elsewhere, here’s a good yarn: Italy, captained by former Australia opener Joe Burns, have qualified for next year’s men’s T20 World Cup.41st over: India 142-3 (Pant 18, Rahul 53) Bashir bowls three good deliveries before dragging down – he gets away with a Pant cut for two.40th over: India 140-3 (Pant 16, Rahul 53) Pant, in a bit of pain after the last ball of Bashir’s over, is seen to by the doc.Brydon Carse is back to pummel the surface as Rahul drives through the covers for two.

39th over: India 136-3 (Pant 16, Rahul 50) Bashir is pushed into the offside for one, with Rahul bringing up his fifty – he got there at Edgbaston and Headingley, too,And then comes Pant’s tumbling sweep, falling down to guide the ball to fine leg for two,38th over: India 133-3 (Pant 14, Rahul 49) Woakes drops short and Rahul, who has been quietly supreme, cuts for four,David Farrelly drops in:Here we are in Newport, Oregon,An American wife who has become a cricket fan.

But she is bored.For me this is how real Tests should be.And this from Phil Keegan, quite possibly, tops the lot when it comes to near misses.If we are talking about misses, I was a student in 1981, living in Headingley.I bet you can guess where this is going.

On day four, with England following on, ticket prices had been reduced to a level even I could afford,I lived within walking distance of the ground and I didn’t go because it seemed obvious England were going to be crushed,And then Botham,37th over: India 128-3 (Pant 14, Rahul 44) Pant rocks back on the crease to cut Bashir for four, and the over ends with another boundary; the offie tosses it up, the left-hander sweeps to the deep midwicket rope,36th over: India 119-3 (Pant 6, Rahul 43) Woakes continues to Pant, with Smith beginning away from the stumps before coming up to them midway through the over.

But then he’s back to donning the cap for the final ball.After all that mixing up, maybe toying a bit with Pant, it’s a one-run over.35th over: India 118-3 (Rahul 42, Pant 6) England inquire about the state of the ball … I don’t think we’re getting a new one.Bashir will continue, with Pant’s eyes sure to light up.It’s Rahul to face, though, and Bashir begins with some nice flight and drift.

A single brings the India keeper on strike and Bashir tosses it up.Pant defends before sweeping the next delivery for four.I don’t think a dodgy finger’s going to restrain him.Rob Lewis writes in:Wimbledon 1980.My third time selling ice creams at the championships (I was a local lad).

This featured the great final between Borg and McEnroe, the one with the extra-special tiebreak still talked about 45 years later.Guess who only saw one undistinguished set and chose to sell ices during one of the most enthralling contests of all time?Yes, I know it’s not cricket, but it was a bad miss....

,,,34th over: India 111-3 (Pant 1, Rahul 40) Rishabh Pant, with an injured finger, is out to bat and he gets off strike with his second ball, punching through point for one,Gill departs! Chris Woakes breaches the wall, finding the nick outside off and Smith, standing up to the stumps, holds on.

England are jubilant, perhaps slightly in disbelief,33rd over: India 107-2 (Gill 16, Rahul 37) Bashir is on, and it feels like a big Test match for him, with England to bowl last,He gets up and running with a maiden,32nd over: India 107-2 (Gill 16, Rahul 37) Can’t be long before Shoaib Bashir gets the chance to twirl,Woakes goes full to Gill, who responds with the straightest of bats, the on-drive sending the ball to the ropes.

31st over: India 103-2 (Gill 12, Rahul 37) Archer has a short-ball field in place as he tries to bump Rahul,A pull shot follows with the next delivery, but it’s controlled, the ball running low for one,Gill tries something funky, backing away to the leg side to try and swat through off; he doesn’t make clean contact,Gill pulls to end the over but the ball lands safely,30th over: India 101-2 (Gill 11, Rahul 36) Woakes sends one down the leg side, with Smith failing to hold on – the batters nick a bye.

Gill’s immaculate front-foot defence closes the over.29th over: India 98-2 (Gill 11, Rahul 34) The players take drinks before Archer winds up from the Nursery End.Gill doesn’t look fussed at all, even when ducking under an Archer bouncer.A coaching-manual defence comes out as Ravi Shastri takes great joy from watching spectators devour ice cream.We’ve hit a proper afternoon lull.

28th over: India 98-2 (Gill 11, Rahul 34) Jamie Smith comes up to the stumps for Woakes, who concedes another boundary, a controlled outside edge bringing Gill four.It’s been a struggle so far for the attack leader, his economy rate up to five.27th over: India 93-2 (Gill 6, Rahul 34) Archer gets a change of ends as Gill takes three off the over, the quick sending a couple down the leg side.26th over: India 90-2 (Gill 3, Rahul 34) Woakes is back and attacks with the element of surprise, forcing Rahul to dig out a yorker.The opener whips with delight later in the over, the boundary taking him to 32.

Another ball on the pads brings Rahul two,25th over: India 80-2 (Gill 2, Rahul 25) Stokes, who has bowled a pretty disciplined spell, delivers a maiden,More global correspondence coming in, first from Chris Prettejohn:Sitting here with my cricket loving family in Ho Chi Minh City on a backpacking holiday not able to listen or use the BBC due to government censorship so watching the OBO on the Guardian instead,Go Jofra!Then Paul Moody:In my hammock in Brasil following you but also trying to track some tennis,Hoping it goes for 5 days and Gil stays in double digits.

24th over: India 80-2 (Gill 2, Rahul 25) Archer gets to launch at Gill, who leaves the first ball well alone outside off.The forward defence comes out before Gill pulls for one off the penultimate delivery.23rd over: India 79-2 (Gill 1, Rahul 25) Gill gets a single off Stokes to open his account before Rahul clips down the leg side for four.I’m telling you all: Rahul’s on for a big one.22nd over: India 74-2 (Gill 0, Rahul 21) Archer is back to have a go at Gill.

He has to take on Rahul first, and an 88mph bumper rattles the glove, the batter doing well to keep the ball down,The Archer-Gill battle is delayed,21st over: India 74-2 (Gill 0, Rahul 21) Another start for Nair, another middling score,Out comes the man who just bats, bats, bats, and bats,Shubman Gill sees out four dots.

A stunner from Joe Root at slip.Stokes finds Nair’s outside edge and Root leaps low to his left, his left claw doing the rest.The TV umpire checks it out but it’s safely pouched.With that, Root now has 211 catches in Test cricket, the most by a fielder in the format.20th over: India 74-1 (Nair 40, Rahul 21) Nair picks up three off Carse, Rahul takes two.

And then comes this unexpected name from Peter Salmon on the subject of fluent bowling actions.Always thought Greg Chappell had a beautiful bowling action, more or less invented the dibbly-dobbly too.how good is this vid? And how plumb was Vic Marks when given not out the first ball of it?19th over: India 69-1 (Nair 37, Rahul 19) Rahul leans in for a cover drive, a shot that has decorated his series so far.England get awfully excited after Stokes arrows one into Rahul’s front pad, the ball then lobbing up for a catch in the cordon.England decide to review: there’s no inside-edge on it, and the ball’s shown to be going down the leg side.

18th over: India 65-1 (Nair 37, Rahul 15) The 50 partnership comes up, but it’s a bit misleading; Rahul looks more at ease than Nair, the former my bet for a big score.17th over: India 57-1 (Nair 29, Rahul 15) Stokes, after that injury concern yesterday, looks fine at the moment, thundering in with the ball to concede four off the over.16th over: India 53-1 (Nair 26, Rahul 14) Nair hasn’t had it easy so far but he’s battling.He drives well against Carse, who responds with a delicious nip-backer to end the over.Dan Johnson writes in:In the 2006-07 ashes series my wife and I had just moved to Australia (to coincide with the cricket) and went to the Gabba, MCG and SCG (you all know the results).

We had some friends over from England in January and went to see the one-dayer at the SCG,England batted first and did pretty well, but we had to leave at change of innings as we had a restaurant booked,England then went on to win, their first actual non-rubbish performance the tour, but we missed it!15th over: India 47-1 (Nair 21, Rahul 13) Ben Stokes thunders in to get us underway … and he has Nair caught down the leg side! The finger goes up but Nair reviews immediately – turns out it flicked his trousers,Some lovely shouts here from Avitaj Mitra:Of all the ones I have seen live, Shane Bond and Pollock stand out to me for different reasons,Bond for pure liquid grace and Pollock for efficiency.

As a lefty myself, a shout out to Nathan Bracken for an extremely smooth action, and he should definitely have played more than 5 tests in my opinion,Hamish Simmers takes us back 40 years,Further to Tom’s comment from the 8th overI grew up in NZ,I was at Carisbrook in Dunedin for the first day of third test between NZ and PAK as a 9yo in Feb 1985,We left around 5.

30pm feeling deflated, with Pakistan on 240 for 2 and Qasim Umar 96 not out,By the time we got home half an hour later, Hadlee had a 5-for and Pakistan were 251 for 7,NZ went on to put on an unbeaten 50-run partnership for the last wicket in the fourth innings (Coney and Chatfield, after Cairns retired hurt) to win the match and pull off one of the greatest comebacks in cricket history,Some more correspondence on the subject of lovely bowling actions,Charles Tinsley writes:There is some very grainy footage of Larwood online and it really is worth a look
societySee all
A picture

Church must ‘turn back’ public opinion on assisted dying, says archbishop

Members of the Church of England should work to “withstand and even turn back” the forces of public opinion “that risk making … assisted dying a reality in our national life”, the archbishop of York has said.Speaking to the church’s General Synod on Friday, Stephen Cottrell said permitting assisted dying would change “forever the contract between doctor and patient, pressurising the vulnerable and assuming an authority over death that belongs to God alone”.MPs voted last month to pass a bill giving some terminally ill adults in England and Wales the legal right to be assisted to end their lives. It will now pass to the House of Lords, where 26 Anglican bishops sit by right, for further scrutiny.Cottrell is in the second most senior clerical position in the Anglican church and is currently its de facto leader after the resignation of Justin Welby as archbishop of Canterbury last year

A picture

Resident doctors’ 29% pay claim is non-negotiable, BMA chair says

Resident doctors’ 29% pay claim is non-negotiable, reasonable and easily affordable for the NHS, the new leader of the medical profession has said.Strikes to ensure resident – formerly junior – doctors in England get the full 29% could drag on for years, according to Dr Tom Dolphin, the British Medical Association’s new council chair.The doctors’ union will not negotiate on or accept a lower figure because that is the extent of the real-terms loss of earnings resident doctors have suffered since 2008, which they want restored – in full – Dolphin told the Guardian in his first interview since taking over last month.The 29% demand is not up for negotiation “because it’s based on a principle”, said Dolphin, a consultant anaesthetist. “If we picked a different number, that wouldn’t achieve the pay restoration

A picture

Black people in England four times as likely to face homelessness, study finds

Black people in England are almost four times as likely to face homelessness as white people and substantially less likely to get social housing, according to the first major study into homelessness and racism in more than two decades.A three-year research project by academics at Heriot-Watt University found that ethnicity affects a person’s risk of homelessness, even when controlling for factors such as geography, poverty and home ownership rates.They recorded evidence of people resorting to changing their name, accent and hairstyle to try to gain access to housing and other services, and being told by housing officers to be grateful because “you don’t have this back in your country”.The report’s lead author, Prof Suzanne Fitzpatrick, said: “There are long-term forms of structural disadvantage, rooted in historic racism, which are impacting on risks of homelessness. But the data indicates present-day discrimination is also playing a role

A picture

Minority ethnic and deprived children more likely to die after UK intensive care admission

Minority ethnic children and children from deprived backgrounds across the UK are more likely to die following admission to intensive care than their white and more affluent counterparts, a study has found.These children consistently had worse outcomes following their stay in a paediatric intensive care unit (PICU), the research by academics at Imperial College London discovered.The study showed they were more likely to arrive at intensive care severely ill, more likely to die after admission, and more likely to stay longer or be readmitted unexpectedly after discharge.The report, published in the Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, looked at 14 years of UK-wide data between 2008 and 2021, commissioned by the Healthcare Quality Improvement Partnership, on more than 160,000 critically ill children aged 15 and younger.While previous studies have shown that minority ethnic children have an increased rate of admission to PICUs, this study is the first to look at the health outcomes of these children, and children from more deprived backgrounds, following admission

A picture

Living standards are not improving for everyone | Letter

Steve Reed, the environment secretary, is reported as saying that changes to living standards are happening, but for all too many people these are not materialising (‘We’ve made progress’: environment secretary is upbeat despite Labour’s struggles, 6 July).In my part of inner-city Sheffield, residents are often in overcrowded and expensive housing, with energy and food bills at unaffordable levels for their precarious incomes. Our local environment is challenged by fly-tipping and vandalism, with which our austerity-struck council and services cannot keep up. A high proportion of our local residents cannot afford days out, let alone holidays when they might take their children swimming in the sea.This doesn’t mean that people don’t want cleaner rivers and nature protection, but it does mean that increasing their trust in the government would need an end to the two-child benefit cap, employment rights for all, energy tariffs that favour low users, affordable housing and transport, and councils that can invest in things such as parks and street cleaning

A picture

37,000 more children affected by ‘brutal’ two-child benefit cap, data shows

A further 37,000 children were affected by the two-child benefit limit in the year to April, with nearly 1.7 million now living in households affected by the policy, according to new figures described as “devastating and shameful” by charities.Data released by the Department for Work and Pensions on Thursday shows that one in nine children are now affected by the policy, while 62% of affected families have three children and 59% are in work.Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) described it as a “brutal policy” that was making children’s “lives hard and their futures bleak”.“Giving all kids the best start in life will be impossible until government scraps this brutal policy, and a year after the election families can’t wait any longer for the help they desperately need,” said the charity’s chief executive, Alison Garnham