James Anderson: England bowler produces one of the great overs against India in Chennai

James AndersonImage source, BCCI
Image caption,

Anderson's first over was a double-wicket maiden

When England cricket fans woke on Tuesday morning, many of them will have been rueing the fact they didn't set their alarm for the start of play at 4am.

If they had, they would have seen arguably one of the greatest overs in modern-day Test cricket during England's famous victory over India in the first Test.

The hosts were going well: chasing a Test record 420 to win the first Test in Chennai, they looked in control.

Shubman Gill raced to 50 not out in eye-catching style while captain Virat Kohli, looking majestic while batting in a cap, was putting the pressure back on the England bowlers.

But cometh the hour, cometh the man. Enter James Anderson, the world's most successful fast bowler in Test cricket.

The 38-year-old produced a stunning display of reverse swing.

He bowled Gill with his second ball, sending the off stump flying into the Chennai dirt with a perfect inswinger.

His fourth ball was a repeat and new batsman Ajinkya Rahane narrowly survived an lbw appeal.

A ball later, Anderson took the umpire out of the equation by bowling the India vice-captain with another inswinger.

India were 92-4, their hopes all but over, and England wrapped up a 227-win in the afternoon session.

Speaking after the match, England captain Joe Root described Anderson as "the GOAT of English cricket".

"At 38 to still be getting better and be as fit as ever is fantastic - he is a great role model," said Root.

"His skill level is as good as anyone you'll ever see."

Anderson was typically understated.

"I didn't really do anything out of the ordinary from the plans we had," he said.

"I just got lucky really with a couple that hit some bare patches, and I had a bit of reverse as well.

"It's always nice to see a stump cartwheeling out the ground, it doesn't happen much at my age so I'm really happy with today."

Was it better than Flintoff's over in 2005? Read on and vote below.

How one of the great overs unfolded

  • Ball one: Full with a hint of reverse swing into Gill who defends.

  • Ball two: Gill's off stump is sent cartwheeling as Anderson finds more reverse swing to sneak the ball between bat and pad.

  • Ball three: New batsman Rahane leaves his first ball - another full delivery outside off stump - alone.

  • Ball four: Huge appeal for lbw as Anderson bowls another vicious inswinger which also keeps low. England review the umpire's not out decision but Rahane narrowly survives.

  • Ball five: The stumps are splattered again. Anderson repeats the previous delivery and the ball beats bat and pad. Vice-captain Rahane is dismissed for a three-ball duck.

  • Ball six: Anderson goes round the wicket and Rishabh Pant defends his first ball.

'One for the ages' - what you said

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Anderson's over rivalled one bowled by Andrew Flintoff at Edgbaston in 2005 against Australia as the greatest in recent memory

  • Thomas Watts: This over from Jimmy Anderson is one for the ages. One to say you watched live.

  • Aadam: Oh Jimmy that should be illegal. One of the naughtiest overs you'll ever see.

  • Sam Brookes: This is up there with the Flintoff over to Ponting. Jimmy has the ball on a sixpence!

  • Charlie: Flintoff to Kallis, Flintoff to Ponting. Anderson to Gill and Rahane. Best pace bowler in history.

  • Rob Allen: Oh Jimmy Jimmy!! Simply put: the greatest seam bowler to have lived.

  • Chris: Marrying my wife and waking up in time for that Anderson over are two of the best decisions I've ever made.

Which over was better - Flintoff or Anderson?

"Ponting" was trending on social media on Tuesday with cricket fans comparing Anderson's over to one bowled by Andrew Flintoff to former Australia captain Ricky Ponting during the 2005 Ashes. Vote for whichever you think was best below.

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If you are viewing this page on the BBC News app please click here to vote.

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'The GOAT' - how the cricket world reacted

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