Thursday 24 July 2014

ICC rejects 2018 offer, cricket stays out of Commonwealth Games


Twenty20 cricket will feature in this year's Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea, but Asian powerhouses India and Pakistan will not participate.


MUMBAI (Reuters) - Cricket's absence from Commonwealth Games will continue at least until the 2018 Games in Australia after the International Cricket Council (ICC) turned down an invitation from the governing body of the multi-sport event.

South Africa won the gold medal when cricket, in its 50-over format, made its only appearance at the quadrennial event featuring mostly former British colonies during the 1998 Kuala Lumpur Games.
Prince Tunku Imran of Malaysia, the chairman of the Commonwealth Games Federation, formally approached the ICC in 2012 to consider participating in the 2014 Glasgow Games, which got underway on Wednesday, and also the next one.
"There were discussions about the inclusion of men's and women's Twenty20 cricket in both the 2014 and 2018 Commonwealth Games but neither of these came to fruition," an ICC spokesperson told Reuters in a statement.
"However, cricket is scheduled to feature in the Commonwealth Youth Games in St Lucia in 2017."
While Twenty20 is considered a fit for multi-sport events, the ICC currently holds a 20-over World Cup every two years.
The dense 2015-2023 cricketing calendar and the 2018 Games, scheduled Apr 4-15 at Gold Coast, clashing with the lucrative Indian Premier League are also believed to be major hurdles for the sport's inclusion in the event.
Twenty20 cricket will feature in this year's Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea, but Asian powerhouses India and Pakistan will not participate.
(Reporting by Sudipto Ganguly; editing by Amlan Chakraborty)

Yet another SSC hundred for Jayawardene


Mahela Jayawardene cashed in again at his favourite venue to take Sri Lanka to 305 for 5.

Sri Lanka 305 for 5 (Jayawardene 140*, Mathews 63) v South Africa
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
Jayawardene walks on the pitch during a break in Colombo.The last time Mahela Jayawardene batted against South Africa in a Test at the SSC, he made 374, the highest score ever made by a right-handed batsman in Test cricket. Today he walked off to applause for an unbeaten 140 as his 34th Test century held together Sri Lanka's innings after Angelo Mathews won the toss on what looks another SSC batting beauty. It was his 11th Test hundred at his home venue - as many as the likes of Saeed Anwar, Ravi Shastri, Nathan Astle and Dean Jones each managed over their entire Test careers - and extended his lead at the top of the list for most Test runs scored at a single venue.
With Jayawardene passing 5000 first-class runs at the SSC, it might seem like it was business as usual, but it was anything but in the morning session. The peculiar sights early on included an elderly man in the stands keeping cool with a tiny portable fan on his chest, the run-machine Kumar Sangakkara getting a golden duck at a ground he thrives on, the South Africa slip cordon putting down two fairly straightforward chances and Sri Lanka motoring along at well above six an over for a big chunk of the first session of the Test.
What was not unexpected in the first session was Dale Steyn again showing he can cause damage on any surface in the world, whether a minefield or a highway. He banged it in in the fifth over had Upul Tharanga fending a catch to the keeper.
Steyn followed that up with another short ball to Sangakkara, who responded with a weak pull straight to Imran Tahir at square leg. Sangakkara walked off practising the pull, much like several England batsmen on the final day at Lord's earlier this week.
With Vernon Philander relentlessly probing around off stump, Sri Lanka looked shaky. Kaushal Silva was dropped at third slip off Philander by Alviro Petersen and Jayawardene's start-stop approach for a single at cover almost resulted in Silva's run-out.
Steyn got only a four-over spell with the new ball though, and once Philander's fruitless first stint was over, Sri Lanka cashed in against the spinners. The SSC is a track where batsmen are advised to give the first session to the bowlers, and then capitalise on the flatness of the surface. Jayawardene and Silva didn't have to wait that long. The boundaries were incessant, as full tosses were swatted to midwicket, full balls were driven away. Fifty-runs came in eight overs, and the early pressure had evaporated.
Silva had a reprieve early on against Duminy, when his edge whizzed past the stationary AB de Villiers at first slip. With minutes to go before lunch, Silva gave de Villiers another chance, and this time his streaky innings was over.
Another quick wicket, and South Africa would have had a crack at Sri Lanka's inexperienced lower-middle order. With Dinesh Chandimal and Lahiru Thirimanne, two youngsters in whom Sri Lanka had placed immense amount of faith, dropped, the batsmen to follow were Kithuruwan Vithanage and debutant Niroshan Dickwella. That breakthrough didn't arrive though, as Jayawardene and the in-form Angelo Mathews put on a century stand.
They took no risks, but still scored at a brisk pace, latching on to the regular bad ball. The closest South Africa came to a wicket in the second session was when an off-balance de Villiers couldn't fire in a direct hit just before drinks. The session ended with Jayawardene top-edging a boundary to fine leg to bring up his hundred, one of the rare false strokes in a typically polished innings, where he once again demonstrated the value of timing, touch and placement. A nonchalant upper cut over the slips off Morne Morkel was among the highlights of his innings.
Mathews picked up most of his runs with drives and nudges to the leg side, though he also pounced on the many short and wide deliveries on offer, crashing them past point. With the attack fading, Mathews went for one more cut when Duminy dropped short, only to edge through to the keeper. Once again the part-time offspinner had delivered an unexpected breakthrough for South Africa.
Sri Lanka have picked three specialists spinners, clearly expecting plenty of turn as the match progresses, but South Africa's lone specialist spinner had another rough outing. The number of poor deliveries Tahir bowled - either half-trackers or loopy full tosses - were too many to be excused as the usual difficulty legspinners have in controlling the ball. South Africa need him to lift his game in the second innings, when the surface will have more in it for him.
It was the quicks who caused trouble towards the end of the day, with Vithanage stuttering against a short-ball barrage from Steyn before being undone by a bouncer from Morne Morkel. Dickwella faced a testing time before stumps, but he survived with the help of the DRS.
Sri Lanka's batsmen still have work to do on the second day, but who better to bank on at the SSC than Jayawardene?
ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

Wednesday 23 July 2014

Sri Lanka arrive at flat SSC with roles reversed


As Sri Lanka arrive in Colombo needing to win to level the series, Angelo Mathews knows the SSC could become a site of disappointment.


Angelo Mathews during a practice session in Colombo.
Sri Lanka like to begin Test series in Galle because they feel they can win there. In the past they have arrived at the SSC on a 1-0 cushion, and been happy to see a flat deck on which they can suck the life out of the series, and demoralise the opposition attack.

In the past few years, however, there has been a shift. Sri Lanka no longer have a bowler who dominates visiting batsmen from the first day of a series until its final session. In the post-Muttiah Muralitharan era, Sri Lanka have taken four 1-0 leads in Galle, and blown that lead three times, losing matches in Colombo. The P Sara Oval has been their least favoured venue, but as Sri Lanka arrive in the big city needing to win to level the series, Angelo Mathews knows the SSC could become a site of disappointment against South Africa as well.
"It is usually a flat wicket here," Mathews said. "It does a little bit in the morning session and then turns out to be a batting paradise. I hope it will be different. But whatever pitch we play on we've got to find ways to beat them. The wicket and the toss won't make a massive difference."
The task of taking 20 South Africa wickets has been made tougher by the injury to Shaminda Eranga, but Mathews suggested that while changes in personnel were likely, Sri Lanka will continue to play seven batsmen in their XI.
"I would like to go 7-4 on any wicket," he said. "The batters need to score runs to give the bowlers a chance. We haven't done that properly in the last few games. It's just that we have to be a bit more cautious. There will be phases in the game when the South Africa bowlers will be steaming in, and they will be reverse-swinging the ball. Those little phases we've got to win. They won most of those situations in the last Test."
Among the drawbacks of playing seven batsmen, is occasionally finding yourself a bowler short, as Sri Lanka did in Galle, when Eranga was rendered unfit to bowl after the first day. Mathews is the only reliable bowling option in the top seven, but he bowls only sporadically in Tests. He delivered 11 overs in Sri Lanka's first innings, but did not bowl at all in the second.
"I am trying to manage my bowling because I am still struggling with my knee," Mathews said. "There's a little bit of a niggle, especially in Test matches."
Mathews may also re-evaluate his place in the batting order, particularly after a spot opens up in the top five. He has averaged 81.69 since becoming captain, but has been hampered by middle-order collapses that have often left him having to bat with the tail.
"Going up the order is an option. Especially after the Pakistan series I might bat higher up, because Mahela Jayawardene is also retiring. Regardless of being the captain you are still a player in the team. You need to contribute with either bat or ball. I am just trying to keep it simple and score runs when I go to bat and pick up a few wickets when I bowl."
Sri Lanka have not launched criticism at South Africa after Vernon Philander was caught tampering the ball in Galle, and Mathews again batted away suggestions that South Africa's victory had been founded on reverse swing, achieved unfairly.
"To be honest we didn't play good cricket. That is the only reason for our loss in Galle. South Africa did reverse swing the ball, but our batsmen have faced reverse-swinging balls before, especially against Pakistan. We are used to that. It's not at all an excuse for our defeat. We will go all out to try and win this Test. If we lose 2-0 it doesn't matter, as long as we play well."

ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

Tuesday 22 July 2014

Secret behind India’s success at Lord’s

The Indian players feel the triumph had everything to do with the preparedness to take on England on green wickets.

India's players celebrate as the 28-year wait for a Test win at Lord's finally ends. (Getty Images)

New Delhi: It may sound cliched, but the roots of India’s historical win at Lord’s can be traced back to the 0-4 debacle on the 2011 tour to England. Every time India lost a Test during that disastrous summer, skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni would stress on the importance of learning from the mistakes and moving on. Throughout the series, Dhoni hardly ever lost his cool despite the results going against his team.

Bogged down by injuries, Dhoni was already looking ahead and plotting for retribution on India’s next visit. The plan came to fruition at the Home of Cricket, with India winning its first Tests on the hallowed turf in 28 years by defeating Alastair Cook’s team in conditions tailor-made for the home team’s benefit.

The Indian players feel the triumph had everything to do with the preparedness to take on England on green wickets. And they thank Dhoni and the coaching staff for their farsightedness.

One of the players said that even though the team played two practice games before the first Test at Trent Bridge, the wickets provided were in complete contrast to what is generally expected in England. The team management had made this clear to every member in the squad.

“Most of us guys weren’t there in 2011. So when we saw the pitch ahead of the first practice game, we were pretty surprised to see a batting paradise. But that is when the seniors made it clear that this was to prevent us from adapting to English conditions. With Dhoni and some of the other players facing this very problem in the last series, we knew we would get tough conditions only when the series starts,” the player told MAIL TODAY.

He said it was a surprise to see a flat deck for the first Test.

“We were actually caught off guard. We had expected a wicket that would suit pacers and help the home team. But when that didn’t happen, we knew that the ‘green top’ would come sooner rather than later, and they actually did that at Lord’s. But we were prepared,” he added.

Another player said the most satisfying part of the win was how India looked more at ease on the green track than the England players. “As an international team and from past experiences, we were prepared for any kind of wicket. I guess it was more about executing our plans better and we did just that,” he told MAIL TODAY.


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Monday 21 July 2014

Startling parallels between India's Lord's wins of 1986 and 2014

Do you believe in co-incidences?



The Indian cricket team photographed at Lord's, June 4 1986. Back row (left-right): Chetan Sharma, Kiran More, Maninder Singh, Raman Lamba, Manoj Prabhakar. Middle row: Krishnamachari Srikkanth, Roger Binny, Dilip Vengsarkar, VB Prabhudesai (assistant manager), Sandeep Patil, Mohammed Azharuddin, Shivial Yadav, Chandrakant Pandit. Front row: Mohinder Armanath, Kapil Dev (captain) Raj Singh Dungarpur (manager) Ravi Shastri (vice-captain) Sunil Gavaskar. India won the Test series against England 2-0. (Photo by Bob Thomas/Getty Images)
Today, India beat England at Lord's. India had last won a Test match at Lord's way back in June 1986. We compared that five-wicket win over the 95-run one scored on Monday night. Some stunning parallels emerge.
Here they are.

INDIA'S TWO TEST WINS AT LORD'S
WHAT HAD HAPPENED19862014
The World Cup-winning captain is leading India at Lord’s.Kapil DevMS Dhoni
A speedster named Sharma takes a fiver.Chetan SharmaIshant Sharma
A Binny is in the Indian team. Roger BinnyStuart Binny
A batsman from Chennai is India’s opener.K SrikkanthMurali Vijay
A batsman from Mumbai makes a hundred.Dilip VengsarkarAjinjkya Rahane
The England captain, a left-hander who had won his last Test tour of India, is struggling to make runs.David GowerAlastair Cook
An all-rounder who bowls left-arm spin is playing for India.Ravi ShastriRavindra Jadeja
And a bit of non-cricket trivia...
India’s ruling government had come to power with an absolute majority.Rajiv Gandhi-led Congress.Narendra Modi-led BJP.
Argentina and Germany would contest the FIFA World Cup final staged in the Western Hemisphere.Argentina beat West Germany 3-2 in Mexico.Germany beat Argentina 1-0 in Brazil.
Can you spot some more? Do share them with us in the comments.

Ishant devastates England in landmark win


DAY 5 AT LORD'S—India score first away win since 2011 with Sharma's 7-74.


India 295 (Rahane 103, Anderson 4-60) and 342 (Vijay 95, Jadeja 68, Bhuvneshwar 52) beatEngland 319 (Ballance 110, Plunkett 55*, Bhuvneshwar 6-82) and 223 (Root 66, Ishant 7-74) by 95 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
THE MOMENT: Jadeja runs out Anderson to complete the win. THE MOMENT: Jadeja runs out Anderson to complete the win.Ishant Sharma, bowling short and aggressively with the old ball, produced one of the most memorable spells in the history of Indian fast bowling to destroy England's resistance in the second Investec Test at Lord's.
As India completed a 95-run victory 50 minutes before tea on the final day, it ended a run of more than three years without an overseas Test victory and left England befuddled and bereft as they contemplated a winless streak of 10 Tests and the continued failures of their senior players to contribute to a rapidly-changing landscape.
England's defeat, and the muddle-headed cricket they regularly played en route, will increase criticism of Alastair Cook's captaincy despite repeated protestations from England's hierarchy that he remained the man to lead them during a period of rapid change. As their innings ended to a farcical run-out, Cook and his coach Peter Moores, their dejection only half-hidden behind reflective sunglasses, were deep in conversation on the balcony.
But India, who won at Lord's for only the second time in 82 years, will have eyes only for the performance of Ishant, who returned career-best figures of 7 for 74 and invited comparisons with the brilliant spell in Perth in 2008 when he roughed up no less a player of fast bowling than Ricky Ponting and encouraged India's hopes that they had a great fast bowler to reckon with.
Ishant's career has never quite turned out like that, but one could imagine that the intervening years had not existed as he pounded life from the Lord's pitch with the old ball, reviving India's spirits with the last ball before lunch by removing Moeen Ali, and adding Matt Prior, Ben Stokes and Joe Root to hook shots in a burst of 3 for 2 in eight balls as England descended into a self-destructive display of machismo.
Ishant's spell around lunch would go down as among the most important in Indian cricket. Ishant's spell around lunch would go down as among the most important in Indian cricket.Stuart Broad, caught down the leg side, was his final victim, in a spell of 5 for 41 in eight overs, broken by lunch. His use of the short ball was encouraged by his captain, MS Dhoni, and began as a last throw of the dice 10 minutes before lunch, a response to a draining morning in which India had failed to disturb the equanimity of Root and Moeen. From that moment, India never looked back as, bowling from a great height, he exploited occasional indifferent bounce. This was the Ishant of India's dreams - but for those who cared to look deeply enough, it was England assisted.
The ending, in India's eyes, was pure Bollywood. Ravindra Jadeja ran out his adversary, James Anderson. Then he offered a handshake which Anderson felt obliged to accept. Tomorrow, they are pitted against each other again in an ICC enquiry into the off-field brouhaha between them in the Trent Bridge Test.
Ishant's bohemian side was captured by the occasional appearance of non-cricket coloured purple pants as he tore in to bowl, East Perth replaced six years on by St John's Wood. England's innings ended in the 89th over, but the new ball was never even taken.
That these are two middle-ranking teams with problems is undeniable, but their inadequacies as much as their promise had contributed to an engrossing spectacle on a Lord's pitch of uplifting quality. India can celebrate in London before heading to the Ageas Bowl for a third Test beginning on Sunday; England face recriminations, with the Test future of their wicketkeeper, Matt Prior, also bound to be under scrutiny.
India went unrewarded until the final ball of a morning session in which Root and Moeen played with skill and fortitude. Then Ishant summoned a wicked bouncer to have Moeen caught at short leg. One wicket, but potentially a huge psychological shift. There was no skill and fortitude after that, not from England anyway.
Without that wicket, England could have taken enormous satisfaction from a morning which had chipped away 68 of the 214 runs they still needed. India's dressing room morale would have been shaken. But the ball reared aggressively enough for Moeen to tilt his head away in self-protection and a simple catch flew off the glove to Cheteshwar Pujara at short leg. India, it turned out, had found a way to succeed.
Root seemed to have ensured that England went to lunch as buoyant as possible. Ishant had been brought back to hunt a wicket that India were desperately in need of but 14 came off the over. Root struck three boundaries in that first over back, passing his half-century on the way. He moved through the offside arc - straight, covers, backward point. With England 170 for 4, an unlikely victory 149 runs away, it was India's lowest point.
From 72 for 4, Root and Moeen had assembled a fifth-wicket stand of 101 in 44 overs, Root relishing the tension, Moeen composed alongside him, vulnerable occasionally against Ravindra Jadeja's left-arm spin as a couple of nudges dropped safely away from the leg trap.
There had only been one successful chase at Lord's beyond 319 and only 27 successful chases of 300 or above in Test history. But sides bat deeper these days and, although a wonderful Lord's pitch was now offering substantial turn, India only had one (fairly) specialist spinner in Jadeja. The choice of Stuart Binny's medium pace above the spin of R Ashwin was hard to justify.
Such debates were silenced by Ishant. With the new ball only four overs away as he began his innings after lunch, Prior might have been expected to try to hang around with Root, so protecting a young talent like Stokes from the new ball. Instead, he chose aggression, eager to make progress against the short stuff. With the new ball theoretically only two balls away, Prior hooked Ishant to deep midwicket with three men laid out for the trap.
Stokes, out in Ishant's next over, collected a pair, failing to pull him up the slope and skying to Pujara at midwicket. His run of England failures is so long it is now a phone number in the UAE according to fans there. At least Root's swivel pull later in the over had an element of control, but he picked out deep square all the same. Root had imagined he might plot a route to victory. Instead Root 66 turned out to be a road to oblivion.
India's only other win at Lord's came in 1986. David Gower, a captain under pressure, had just followed up a home Ashes victory with a heavy defeat the following winter. He was replaced by Mike Gatting as captain after India won at Lord's. It was easy to advance a theory, perhaps fanciful given England's protestations of loyalty, that Cook might go the same way. But at his post-match press conference he insisted that he had no intention of resigning.
ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

Friday 18 July 2014

Gavaskar released from interim BCCI role


Board vice-president Shivlal Yadav will continue as president for administrative issues not related to the IPL.

Former India captain Sunil Gavaskar has been released by the Supreme Court from his role as the interim BCCI president for IPL matters. Board vice-president Shivlal Yadav will continue as president for administrative issues not related to the IPL while N Srinivasan remains sidelined pending the inquiry into corruption in the league.Sunil Gavaskar: Moving on from the IPL (Getty Images).
Gavaskar had written to the Supreme Court last week, asking it to clarify the status of his position in the BCCI. The court had put him in charge of the IPL this March.
This would mean that Gavaskar can resume his media commitments in India, from which he had been barred since his appointment for the BCCI role.
It was also decided that the two-judge bench of Justice Ibrahim Kalifulla and Justice TS Thakur will continue to hear the case which has been filed by the Cricket Association of Bihar against the BCCI following the 2013 IPL corruption scandal.

ESPN Sports Media Ltd.

Kumar counters Ballance century

Gary Ballance scored his second Test ton, while Bhuvneshwar Kumar took four wickets as India edged ahead at stumps on Day 2 of the Lord's Test.


Gary Ballance rescued England with his second Test century. (Reuters)

Scorecard | Action in Images | Cook fails again | Day 1 Report | Schedule

Another failure for Alastair Cook, an increasingly beleaguered England captain, followed by a long, hard grind against a persistent India attack on London's hottest day of the year: this Lord's Test match Friday was never going to grant its favours easily. But Gary Ballance does not look like a batsman who needs an easy life. Increasingly, he suggests he is the rock on which England can build.

Andy Flower, England's previous coach, praised Jonathan Trott as his rock when Trott's departure from last winter's Ashes tour proved to a harbinger of their decline. It might just be that Peter Moores, and his selection panel, have unearthed a rock of his own. Not a gurning rock given to idiosyncratic pitch markings, but a red faced, red necked rock winning seeping admiration among England observers.

There is no instant appeal in Ballance, no flamboyance, no fripperies, no golden curls. He reddens up so quickly that in a series without DRS he is his own walking Hot Spot. But there is resourcefulness by the bucketload. What he again displayed in his second Test hundred at Lord's this summer - Sri Lanka, like India, have also learned of his merit - was a strong technique, based on a preference for the back foot, a fondness for shots square on the off side vaguely reminiscent of Andrew Strauss and, as he established himself, some full-bodied drives from strong forearms.

He will curse his misfortune as he fell to the third over with the second new ball, a leg side strangle won by a little bit of wayward outswing from Bhuvneshwar Kumar, leaving him with four wickets for an impressive day. Matt Prior joined the nightwatchman, Liam Plunkett, who had been sent out more than seven overs from the close to protect him. Closing without further damage at 219 for 6, England trailed by 76 runs.Bhuvneshwar Kumar continues to be India's star performer in England. (Getty Images)

This has been an excellent contest and India performed with determination on an easing pitch, the bowlers maintaining good lines throughout the day and their ground fielding reliable. The spinners are also in this game on a dry, grassy surface - not that either side is fielding one of any renown.

Ballance should have fallen on 32 when he edged Stuart Binny between MS Dhoni and Shikhar Dhawan at first slip, both of them equally culpable for not responding. Binny, bowling his medium-paced wobblers on the ground where his father, Roger, performed so well in the 1983 World Cup final, should have marked his second over in his second Test with a first Test wicket.

Instead, Binny became a catalyst for his century: five boundaries struck off him in eight balls. He drove him through the off side off back and front foot then clipped Binny for two more teeth-gritting boundaries in his next over to pass 100. Determined not to give it away, he produced a barn-door defence to the next ball only for his timing to be so perfect by then that it whistled for four down the ground.

It was a strong-willed, grounded response by Ballance, considering that he arrived at Lord's for the start of the match to discover that he had achieved Minor Celebrity status, in the form of newspaper photographs of a boozy night in in Nottingham after the Trent Bridge Test and the gentlest of reminders from England about his public image. His hundred achieved, he opted to keep his shirt on.

England are under considerable pressure. They suffered all day for their failure to take advantage of excellent bowling conditions on the day one. India's first-innings 295 was inflated; England's batsmen were deflated. India's bowlers stuck impressively to basic principles in conditions where high humidity encouraged the swing bowlers and there was still some nibble in the pitch, although neither were as evident as on the opening day when Ajinkya Rahane played with such a flourish in making 103.

Cook's day started well when he held a juggling catch at first slip - Ben Stokes finding Mohammed Shami's edge in the second over of the day - to ensure that India's last pair added only five to their overnight total: this time at least there would be no last-wicket heroics.

But his demoralising run of scores will again introduce the conversation England's hierarchy simply does not want to hear: his right to the England captaincy. He is beset by criticism both of his tactical nous and dried-up batting returns. It is 26 innings since he Cook scored the last of his England record 25 hundreds, a run during which his average has dropped into the 20s.

His footwork was static as Kumar caught him on the crease with an outswinger that continued down the slope from a good length. Dhoni collected an easy catch from a languid push, leaving Cook to reflect on a summer of mounting misery as he returned to the pavilion.

Kumar deserved recognition for his part in Cook's wicket. He bowled him an over of inswingers the previous over before producing one which left Cook, ensuring that his otherwise confident and well-managed start fell prey to what has now become a recognisable bat dangle.

Criticism sounded immediately. Geoffrey Boycott, commentating on BBC Radio's Test Match Special, called for Cook to return to county cricket to return his form. But even if England took such a desperate move, the fixture list would afford him no release with the counties about to commit to a month of predominantly limited-overs cricket.

Releasing Cook from the strains of captaincy is equally difficult. England, who have not won for nine Tests, their worst run in 20 years, have pinned their entire strategy on allowing Cook to develop a side in his own image and there are no obvious contenders to replace him. His failures, though, cannot continue for ever, especially if England go behind in the series.

Sam Robson, who was dropped off Shami the over before Cook was dismissed - a regulation chance for Rahane at second slip - did not make good his let off. He became Kumar's second victim when he drove at one that faded down the slope, giving Dhoni another simple catch.

Ian Bell and Joe Root perished in the afternoon. Bell's form has also lapsed and he gave Kumar a third wicket when he attempted to leave a ball that bounced and chased him from just short of a length and gloved to Ravindra Jadeja at third slip, a shaken response to a challenging but by no means unplayable ball.

Root's wicket belonged to Jadeja. He was beaten in the flight by a ball which skidded into his pads, but it was a bad decision by umpire Bruce Oxenford who missed an inside nick. Ballance and Moeen Ali then assembled a fifth-wicket stand of 98 after tea before Moeen's careful resistance ended with quite a weak lbw when M Vijay was granted a brief perambulation. 


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