India vs England: Hosts win by 106 runs in Visakhapatnam to level series
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Second Test, Visakhapatnam (day four of five): |
India 396 (Jaiswal 209; Anderson 3-47) & 255 (Gill 104; Hartley 4-77) |
England 253 (Crawley 76; Bumrah 6-45) & 292 (Crawley 73; Bumrah 3-46, Ashwin 3-72) |
India won by 106 runs; series level at 1-1 |
England's series with India is level at 1-1 after a target of 399 to win the second Test proved to be well beyond the tourists in Visakhapatnam.
Looking to complete a chase that would have broken a host of records, England were bowled out for 292 to lose by 106 runs on an anti-climactic fourth day.
England made a strong start and reached 95-1, but the promoted Rehan Ahmed was trapped leg before by Axar Patel to signal a regular fall of wickets.
Opener Zak Crawley looked to be England's main hope, batting with grace for his 73. When he was given lbw to Kuldeep Yadav on review, the game slipped away.
Slim hope remained in the shape of Ben Stokes, only for the captain to be run out in wasteful fashion by a direct hit from Shreyas Iyer. At that point, with 179 required and only three wickets remaining, India could breathe easily.
Ben Foakes and Tom Hartley delayed India with a stand of 56, Hartley surviving two reviews that would have given Ravichandran Ashwin his 500th Test wicket.
Fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah was summoned and pouched a return catch off Foakes and when Shoaib Bashir was caught behind off Mukesh Kumar, Ashwin was given another shot at the milestone.
But Bumrah uprooted Hartley's off stump to end with three in the innings and nine in the match, leaving Ashwin on 499 wickets going into the third Test in Rajkot on 15 February.
A step too far for England
This was a huge ask, even for an England side that have made a habit of chasing big fourth-innings targets and pulled off a stunning victory in the first Test in Hyderabad last week.
That it was thought to be possible by England, their supporters and a cautious India team says much about the way Stokes' side have played over the past two years.
After the disadvantage of losing the toss, England were excellent with the ball, especially given their three spinners had only three previous Test caps combined.
Ultimately, the visitors were undone by a collapse of 6-68 in their first innings, when they were blown away by the brilliant Bumrah. It left them too much to do in the chase.
England will spend the break in Abu Dhabi with their families. They will hope Joe Root has escaped any serious damage to the finger he injured here and for an improvement in the condition of Jack Leach, who missed this Test with a knee injury.
Stokes' men will rest knowing they have already achieved more on this tour than some thought they might. England will see the next three Tests as an opportunity, but they are also an incredibly difficult proposition.
England fade after strong start
On Sunday evening, James Anderson had talked about England trying to chase down their target inside 60 or 70 overs on Monday. From 67-1 overnight, England started brightly, with Crawley driving Bumrah and Ahmed attacking Axar.
India retreated, there were gaps where England could score, but Ahmed's misjudgement in playing back to Axar opened the door.
There can be debate over whether England's aggression tipped into recklessness, though only Root's dismissal was ugly. Perhaps affected by his finger, he was skittish for nine balls in which he hit two fours, a six and survived an lbw review. From the 10th he aimed a wild swipe at Ashwin and was caught at point.
Crawley played beautifully for his second half-century in the match and was perhaps unlucky to be lbw on review to Kuldeep's fifth delivery of the day. Jonny Bairstow was pinned in front by Bumrah on the stroke of lunch.
Stokes was playing himself in and came through Bumrah's post-lunch burst, then fell in bizarre fashion. Called for a single by Foakes, Stokes dawdled and was beaten by a direct hit from Shreyas at mid-wicket.
Foakes and Hartley showed spirit, Ashwin was given a long bowl in an attempt to reach his milestone, but eventually Bumrah needed only six deliveries of a new spell to produce the slower ball that out-foxed Foakes.
Mukesh became the first seamer other than Bumrah or Anderson to take a wicket in the series and the stage was set for Ashwin, only for Bumrah to whistle through Hartley's defensive grope.
India bounce back
This was a strong fightback from India, who have bounced back from the shock of Hyderabad to square the series without five first-choice players.
They have been led by young batters who could form the backbone of their line-up for years to come. Yashasvi Jaiswal made a stunning double century in the first innings, Shubman Gill a determined hundred in the second.
But England's main tormentor is the awesome Bumrah, whose ability to move the ball at high pace is threatening to become a decisive factor in the series. The tourists must ponder a way to counter his sensational skill during the break.
India have a proud home record. They have not lost a series in this country for 12 years and remain favourites despite England's strong showing over the first two Tests.
The home side will hope to welcome back all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja and batter KL Rahul after injuries, but there is so far no word on Virat Kohli, who did not play in Hyderabad or Visakhapatnam for personal reasons.
'England showed a lot of fight' - reaction
England captain Ben Stokes on TNT Sports: "Coming into the last innings we had full belief in ourselves that we could chase it down. The way in which we went about taking on that challenge is what we're all about.
"Congratulations to India, obviously we ended up on the wrong side of the result, but it was another great game."
India captain Rohit Sharma: "We know we were up against a good challenge, the last couple of years England have been playing really good cricket so it was always going to be tough. It's a good a win but it's a tough series still."
Player of the match Jasprit Bumrah: "I am just so happy that we won, and it feels even better to contribute to that success."
Former England spinner Phil Tufnell: "England showed a lot of fight but India's bowlers were far too good, they proved too much."