Key events
82nd over: England 356-8( Atkinson 7, Tongue 0) England need 18 to win Siraj from the pavilion end. Atkinson takes a single first ball, leaving Tongue to play and miss. And play and miss. Oh bravo, an immaculate forward defensive. Siraj finishes with an outswinger to serve on a silver platter. Tongue survives.
81st over: England 355-8( Atkinson 6, Tongue 0) England need 19 to win Krishna. Atkinson goes for broke, cutting with feeling, but cut off at deep third. In the dressing-room window, Chris Woakes, left-arm tucked into his jumper, smiles. Then – the tension – an lbw appeal against Tongue. Given out! Hit on a lunging front pad. Tongue reviews, missing leg. Woakes smiles again. Ball to boot next ball, another appeal, not out. And now the rain starts.
80th over: England 354-8( Atkinson 5, Tongue 0) England need 20 to win Siraj delivering the ball on a thread. Atkinson beaten by three in a row, a leg bye gets him up the other end – which is not great news for Overton, who is done by a big pad and a coat of varnish. Enter Josh Tongue, Test average of six. Winviz now makes an Indian victory 76 per cent likely.
WICKET! Overton lbw Siraj 9 (England 354-8)
Overton stretches his huge pad forwards and is hit midway up the shin. Umpire Dharmsesena eats a full meal then slowly raises his finger. Overton reviews, but it is umpire’s call!
79th over: England 353-7 ( Overton 9, Atkinson 5) England need 24 to win Krishna has re-found his mojo. A desperate dive by Jadeja saves a run on the rope. He limps back to position.
78th over: England 349-7 ( Overton 8, Atkinson 2) England need 25 to win My heart is in my throat, Atkinson’s first ball is edged to second slip where KL Rahul has it in his finger tips. It is unclear whether it quite carried, but Rahul crouches and looks at the ground, dismayed. Then a leading edge by Atkinson, just wide of cover. A good stop by Jurel to an Overton swipe. It had to be Siraj. The new ball is due in two, but he is making it move like a boomerang.
“Sitting in Brittany,” writes Tom Banks. “TMS overseas on. Kids want to go to the beach but I have informed them we are not going anywhere for the next hour. The anticipation is killing all of us (for different reasons obviously).”
WICKET! Smith c Jurel b Siraj 2 (England 347-7)
A fat outside edge. The umpires check it – to calm everything down? And yes – a clean catch from an advancing prod. Oh my.
77th over: England 347-6 (Smith 2, Overton 8) England need 27 to win Krishna to finish off the four balls of last night’s over. Overton pulls the first, a short ball, for four. Bang. The next also greets the boundary – an awkward inside edge, scything past leg stump. Has a dirty swipe at the next, misses. And plays back carefully at the fourth.
Morning session – England need 35 to win
A full house, a huddle for India, chewing gum for Jamie Smith. Jerusalem the soundtrack.
A welcome flurry of emails land in the OBO box – hopefully things last long enough to get through them all. Ant sized trousers on an elephant, that’s the kind of tension we’re after.
“Greetings from Ithaca where the weather is balmier than Manchester and the Oval.” Enough already Colum Fordham.
”This series has been a bit of an Odyssey, with both teams striving to the limits to bring their team success – Pant, Bumrah, Stokes and Woakes putting their bodies on the line. To quote Homer, “Be strong – saith my heart: I am a soldier. I have seen worse sights than this”. Rather appropriate for Woakes in a sling yet willing to bat for his country.
One more quite from the Odyssey: “ The blade itself incites to deeds of violence.” Surely, Homer was writing about Harry Brook?
This morning promises to be a thrilling denouement to a wonderful test series which could end up 2-2, probably the fairer result, or 3-1 to England, which would flatter the home team. Though I wouldn’t mind!”
John Starbuck rolls back the years. “Some of us can recall the drama of Colin Cowdrey facing Hall & Griffiths whilst batting with a broken arm in plaster. It didn’t work then and, if a repeat has to happen, I doubt it will work now. Cue monster celebrations if it does.”
From the MCC website. “The crowd held its breath and the BBC delayed its regular evening news bulletin to stay with the live coverage. Hall began the last over with England needing eight. Two singles were scampered off the first three balls, but off the fourth, calamity. Shackleton swung and missed and looked up to see Allen chasing down the wicket towards him. Desperately, Shackleton urged his 39 year-old frame towards the non-striker’s end; he was in a race of the veterans against Worrell, running back from silly mid-off. He lost. Cowdrey, wearing a glove on one hand and a plaster cast on the other, smiled as he walked out through the Pavilion gate.
“He took his place at the non-striker’s end as Allen prepared to face Hall. Two balls left to survive for the draw, and surely six to win was too much. Worrell was not so sure – whatever you do, don’t bowl a no-ball, he told his shattered fast bowler. Twice more, Hall charged in off his 40-yard run, hurling the ball down fast and straight. But Allen’s bat was just as straight and twice he kept it out. It was all over and the match drawn. Cowdrey’s bat had not been needed, but his courage had been.”
The heavy roller is out, Lee Fortis is on it. The new ball is due in 3.4 overs. Nerves?
Siraj is signing autographs. Intensely.
“Bought my son a day five ticket several weeks back,” you clever man David Adam, “and he’s been watching the whole match hoping for wickets to stop and rain to start. As much as yesterday’s crowd were rightly gutted not to see the conclusion, I’m selfishly delighted that my son will get his first taste of Test cricket this morning, even if it’s only half an hour. Surely the series deserves to end with a third ever tied test? Siraj sending an spectactularly unsporting bouncer down at Woakes?”
Absolutely! Overhead cameras show that your son isn’t the only lucky ticket holder, the crowds are pouring in through the Hobbs gate and more. Hope he, and they, gets a thriller.
“Good morning, Tanya.” Hello Richard O’Hagan.
“Can I please say another HUGE thank you to all of the OBOers who so generously supported my club’s 24 Hour Netathon in aid of Opening Up Cricket. With the help of this wonderful community we smashed our fundraising target. We are very, very grateful indeed.
In other news, I have just realised that I have a meeting at 11am, so I am off for a sulk.”
Wonderful news about the fundraising, less so about the meeting. Commiserations. Any chance of bad light postponing flow charts?
Woakes ready to bat if needed for England
“If I don’t go out today, I won’t be able to forgive myself,” is what Chris Woakes told Joe Root this morning. I think you can rely on him having a bat if needed.
Joe Root is chatting to Stuart Broad and Ian Ward. He plays tribute to Graham Thorpe, then Harry Brook, his partner in that incredible partnership yesterday.
“Brooky is not a big talker out in the middle but we have played a lot together and complement each other. I can be a bit busy and he can really upset bowlers’ rhythms and before you know it they’ve got a long off, everything seems to happen at a completely different pace [when he’s batting.]”
Pictures from The Oval, where the skies are dirty, but the players are out, practising. Pictures of England arriving, Jamie Smith in a white T-shirt like a teenager off for a kickaround; Jamie Overton brooding largely in maroon, Chris Woakes outrageously handsome in a sling.
If you’re at The Oval, do let us know what the atmosphere is like. And the clouds.
And Simon on Mohammed Siraj, India’s rubber band of energy, and his fatal step back.
Some great writing by the team at The Oval yesterday:
Ali’s match report:
Barney’s homage to Harry Brook:
Preamble
After five Tests of high-class and at times chaotic cricket, it all comes down to this – half a session, if you’re lucky, 35 runs and four wickets.
With every sinew of every body in these two weary teams stretched to an E, it is almost-cruel to make them do battle again. But for us, fat in our armchairs, it is an umbrella on the cocktail – a last chance to see Siraj, eyes wild, at the top of his mark, to watch Jamie Smith setting sail for series victory at his home ground. Whether last night’s high tension quickly dissolves to bathos, we find out when play starts, at 11am.
At least it should start at 11am. While it is chucking it down here in Manchester, as Storm Floris takes hold, things look better in London. Our man on the ground Jim Wallace reports that a sunny morning has turned grey, but there is no rain yet.
Do join us for this final morning of nervous anticipation, to chew over the series a last time, or to look forward to what it means for England’s Ashes hopes or Shubman Gill’s young Indian team.