IND vs ENG 3rd Test: Sarfaraz impresses as Rohit, Jadeja lead India's recovery on Day 1

2 months ago 87

Team India fought off early top-order struggles to post 326/5 on Day 1 of the third Test against England in Rajkot on Thursday. After having won the toss and opted to bat, India failed to have the best of starts as Yashasvi Jaiswal (10), Shubman Gill (0) and Rajat Patidar (5) were dismissed to leave the hosts in a spot of bother at 33/3. However, skipper Rohit Sharma led from the front with a knock of 131 and Ravindra Jadeja (110 not out) too scored an unbeaten century, with the duo putting up a partnership of 204 for the fourth wicket.

As it happened: IND vs ENG 3rd Test Day 1

For Rohit, this was a knock that the India skipper himself needed following a string of disappointing performances in recent Test matches. Rohit got to to his half-century in 71 deliveries, and converted that into a big knock with a few composed shots.

Rohit, however, fell to Mark Wood’s short ball while looking to play it across the line. The India skipper’s top edge fell straight to Ben Stokes at mid-wicket.

Apart from Rohit and Jadeja, debutant Sarfaraz Khan also impressed for the hosts. Sarfaraz was one of the two India debutants in Rajkot with the other player being Dhruv Jurel. Sarfaraz came into bat following Rohit’s dismissal that left India at 237/4, and played a few confident sweep and lofted shots. The 26-year-old got to his fifty in 48 balls, scoring seven fours and a six. However, Sarfaraz was involved in a mix up with Ravindra Jadeja that resulted in the former’s run-out. Sarfaraz and Jadeja were involved in a 77-run stand for the fifth wicket.

For England, fast bowler Mark Wood (3/69) vindicated his selection as England’s second pacer with a two-wicket burst in the morning, accounting for Yashasvi Jaiswal (10) and Shubman Gill (0), while spinner Tom Hartley (1/81) got the better of Rajat Patidar (5) to leave India tottering.

Jaiswal was caught in the slips by Joe Root while Gill looked susceptible against the moving ball. After beating Gill on the inside edge, Wood found an outside edge to send back India’s No 3 for a nine-ball duck.

Patidar was outdone by a ball from Hartley that neither spun sharply nor bounced unevenly but seemed to have slowed off the surface. Patidar was unable to control his shot as the ball simply ballooned towards short cover for a regulation catch.

The pressure on the Indian camp was palpable and the team management opted for a safer route by holding Sarfaraz back and promote Jadeja at No 5  a spot where he has batted at in only five out of his 70 Tests yet.

What transpired after the first hour calmed all the nerves in the dressing room as senior pros Rohit and Jadeja recorded only the third double-century partnership for India against England in 135 Tests.

With 204 runs for the fourth wicket, Rohit and Jadeja joined the esteemed company of Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly (249 vs England at Leeds in August 2002) and Vijay Hazare and Vijay Manjrekar (222 vs England at Leeds in June 1952) for having put on more than 200 against the Englishmen. It was also the highest partnership between Rohit and Jadeja in an under-transition Indian side as well as their second in triple figures, having put on 100 for the sixth wicket against New Zealand at Kanpur in September 2016.

As if he had saved his best in the series for this day, Rohit was unhurried and completely assured in the middle, producing a knock that was in complete contrast of his recent approach.

Rohit brought up his 11th Test ton shortly after play resumed in the final session and looked set for a long haul. With Wood returning for another barrage of short balls amid a packed leg-side field, Rohit’s timing went awry as he looked to work the ball.

A top edge settled into the hands of England captain Ben Stokes, who was ultimately rewarded for his out of the box field settings. Nevertheless, the Indian captain walked off having done his job of rebuilding the innings.

The timing for his maiden Test outing was perfect for Sarfaraz, who unleashed his array of strokes  powerful sweep shots and lofted drives over the in field  to race to a maiden half-century, which came off just 48 balls and included seven fours and a six. In fact, Jadeja was 15 runs short of his ton when Sarfaraz walked out to bat and when the senior batter reached his triple-figure mark, the youngster was already in his 60s.

Jadeja eventually brought up his fourth Test hundred and a second consecutive at his home ground here, but not before Sarfaraz was tragically run out following a mix-up with the southpaw.

With PTI inputs

Read Entire Article