NOTTINGHAM: The England seamers took three early
wickets in an eventful morning session on the fifth and final
day of the opening Test against India at Trent Bridge on
Sunday but the match still appeared to be heading for a draw.
The visitors reached 230 for six at lunch, with Test debutant
Stuart Binny (26) and Ravindra Jadeja (18) unbeaten at the
interval after stemming the tide of wickets. India have a lead of
191 runs and with only two sessions left in the match, an
England run chase and a victory in the first of the five-match
series seemed unlikely.
The tourists started the day on 167 for three, ahead by 128 runs,
and aiming to bat the day out for a draw on a flat and
unresponsive wicket. A gloomy Nottingham sky, however,
helped the hosts´ seam attack find some swing and they began
the morning in relentless fashion, bowling perfect line and
length to keep India´s batsmen under pressure for a possibly
victory.
England got the early breakthrough they craved in the second
over of the day when Stuart Broad got the ball to reverse swing
and Virat Kohli (eight), widely considered India´s most
dangerous batsmen, was trapped leg before.
Broad claimed his second victim soon after when Ajinkya
Rahane fell for 24 after edging a swinging delivery through to
wicketkeeper Matt Prior.
India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni (11) was dropped by his
England counterpart Alastair Cook off Broad but failed to make
the most of his luck when Liam Plunkett sent his stumps
cartwheeling out of the ground with a full delivery.
The visitors were headed for further trouble when Jadeja almost
got run out trying to steal a third run but the third umpire
deemed he had just managed to reach the crease in time.
England are chasing their first win in nine Test matches and the
first of coach Peter Moores´ second spell in charge, while India
have not won a Test away from home since 2011. The last
drawn Test at Trent Bridge in 2002 was also played between
England and India.
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