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England beat India by 266 runs to secure first Test win in a year England beat India by 266 runs to secure first Test win in a year
(about 3 hours later)
Moeen Ali and Jimmy Anderson led England’s surge to a series-levelling 266-run victory with more than two sessions to spare in the third Test against India at the Ageas Bowl. First Jimmy Anderson, and then Moeen Ali, bowled England to victory in the third Test almost before many of the excellent last-day crowd who turned up had managed to get into the ground, following traffic chaos. About 10 minutes remained of the morning session when the off-spinner Moeen beat the tentative bat of India’s last man Pankaj Singh and hit the stumps.
Anderson set aside any concerns over the disciplinary proceedings he must face on Friday morning, over his spat with Ravindra Jadeja in the first Test at Trent Bridge, to provide England with the early impetus in the final straight. The seamer finished with match figures of seven for 77, after taking the first two of six wickets England still needed to make it 1-1 with two Tests to play. Anderson may well be absent, depending on the outcome of his hearing, when the teams rejoin battle on his home ground at Old Trafford next week. India had offered scant resistance: no heroics on a surface that, as all good cricket pitches should, offered help to the bowlers, spin and seam alike, on the final day. The groundsman at the Ageas Bowl can take a bow for that.
Moeen (six for 67) surely will be in action in Manchester, though, increasingly belying his billing as a mere part-time off-spinner after taking his series tally to 15 wickets and match haul to eight with his maiden five-wicket return here. Only Ajinkya Rahane’s defiant and unbeaten 52 held up England for long, after India resumed on 112 for four still in notional pursuit of a world-record 445 but were bowled out before lunch for 178. Bowled out for 178 in a shade under 67 overs, the margin of defeat for India was 266 runs, a fine riposte from England after their abjectcapitulation at Lord’s. This may be only the bottom rung of a steep ladder but it is a noteworthy first step upwards: a complete performance in a match England simply could not afford to lose and which ended a 10-match winless sequence that goes back to August last year. It was almost too good to be true, in fact, for they dominated every one of the 17 sessions of the match.
Anderson had England up and running with only his third delivery, Rohit Sharma apparently surprised to be given out caught-behind pushing forward at a delivery he might perhaps have left. He had to go, though, without addition to his overnight six and India did not reopen their account either until well into the fourth over of another sunny morning. The architect of the win was unquestionably Anderson, whose magnificent bowling throughout, but most pertinently in the first Indian innings, where he capitalised on the England total, put his side into the box seat. Match figures of seven for 77 almost do the quality of his bowling a disservice and he stood head and shoulders above the rest of the pace bowlers in the match.
There was no doubt about Anderson’s next success, another caught-behind and Jos Buttler’s sixth on debut, when Mahendra Singh Dhoni got a much more obvious edge on some full-length swing to also go for six. Given their recent history, and impending hearings, new batsman Jadeja was surely also on Anderson’s hit-list. Having got both Dhoni and the left-hander among his five first-innings victims, Anderson could not double up this time. Instead, after a 13-over wait for England, it was Moeen who got Jadeja yorking himself as the off-spinner drifting one into him to hit the bottom of off-stump. There were candidates galore but rightfully he was deemed man of the match. Whether he will have the opportunity to repeat this at Old Trafford, when the fourth Test is scheduled to start on 7 August, will be down to the judgment of the Australian former judge Gordon Lewis, who will be adjudicating on the charge of serious misconduct levelled against him by India, for an alleged off-field incident during the first Test at Trent Bridge, which if upheld, could result in a suspension.
For good measure, Mooen then saw off Bhuvneshwar Kumar so often England’s stumbling block in the India tail this summer for a duck, his second wicket in the same over, with an inside-edge on to his pad and into the hands of gully. Moeen then made short work of Mohammed Shami, clean-bowling him and soon afterwards No11 Pankaj Singh to end the match. Anderson made the first inroads into the Indian innings to set up things but it was Moeen’s day. Given a responsive pitch, runs on the board to back him and the increasing confidence of his captain, he visibly gained in stature, taking four more wickets to the two he had on the fourth evening a spell of four for 17 in 22 balls that brought him six for 67 in the innings. It was the best figures by an England spinner since Monty Panesar took six for 62 against Pakistan in Abu Dhabi early in 2012 and Graeme Swann’s six for 65 against Pakistan at Edgbaston in 2010 and eight for 129 in the match.
The only shame was that, although a much bigger crowd than expected was in attendance to cheer Alastair Cook’s team to their first win in 11 Tests dating back to last summer’s Ashes some arrived barely in time to see the tourists’ terminal falter. Park-and-ride arrangements at this out-of-town venue did not extend until the last day and demand turned out to be high to witness the culmination of England’s mid-series resurgence. In the end, though, India lasted long enough to ensure almost everyone arrived in time for the end of England’s party. He now has 15 wickets in the series, at 26.46 apiece, outdone on either side only by Anderson’s 16 wickets. Perhaps now those who have persistently used the pejorative term ‘part-timer’ will desist: by no means is he the finished article, far from it, but already he has, with ball and bat, become an important piece in the new England. The Beard that was Feared and then Smeared, after his Gaza wristband controversy, has now become Revered.
He may have received some sound advice along the way. As Vic Marks has sagely pointed out before, one of the great skills of spin bowling is to do well enough to stay on. Moeen has the capacity to spin the ball a lot, more than most finger spinners (Swann, who was exceptional, believes Moeen to be capable of about where he himself was in his latter years) but at the Ageas Bowl, he appeared to reduce that, from about 2,300 revolutions per minute to 1,900 or so.
There is enough there then to turn the ball on a dry fifth day pitch but it also gives him more control. He also seems to have an instinct for understanding the right pace at which to bowl. Central to his wicket-taking has been the ball that does not turn at all, not to be sneered at. Shane Warne, for example, took many wickets with a simple straight ball, for the threat of turn can be as potent as the turn itself.
England have seen sufficient last-day heroics, both from themselves and opposition, to take nothing for granted, although maybe the Indian resignation to the probable outcome could be drawn from watching them playing football only a quarter of an hour before the start of play. For their part, England remember too well Auckland, where Matt Prior’s heroic hundred meant they lasted the final day and, indeed, Headingley where, led by Moeen, the last five wickets got to within two deliveries of a draw.
Anderson though gave his side the perfect start in his first three overs, when his third ball of the day found the edge of Rohit Sharma’s bat for Jos Buttler to take the catch (the batsman’s bemusement was at odds with Snicko, which showed good contact), and then five balls later, in his following over, MS Dhoni followed suit.
There followed a stand of 32 between Ajinkya Rahane and Ravindra Jadeja but not without alarm as Anderson, Broad and Chris Woakes all beat the bat.
This was no flat-top unforgiving surface. Cook brought Moeen into the attack to bowl the ninth over of the morning from the northern end of the ground but he had to wait until the start of his sixth over for his first success of the day.
Jadeja had played well enough, waiting for the short ball from Moeen to put away on the offside. Although Rahane had driven him delicately through extra cover when he tossed one up on off stump, Jadeja was deceived by a ball fuller than he expected and not turning. The batsman drove, and perhaps with the thinnest of inside edges, was bowled.
Now England were into the tail. Bhuvneshwar Kumar was next to go, caught in the gully by Anderson off Moeen who then bowled Mohammed Shami in his next over, this time the ball turning sharply between pad and groping bat. Moeen had his fifth wicket – and it left only Pankaj.
A brace of boundaries swept by Rahane took him to a half century and a couple of meaty heaves to the fence by Pankaj dented Moeen’s figures but finally the bowler sneaked one round the outside of Pankaj’s bat. Moeen diffidently led the side from the field.