Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Rediscover­ing a player

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In Pope, England have also rediscover­ed a player who can score aggressive­ly while sticking to convention­al long-form batting. For far too long have England been forced to shoehorn white-ball cricketers as Test batters.

Pope is as old fashioned as Test batting can get—short stature, high elbow, organised back and across set up. He looked a far more confident player from the one India first saw in 2018 when, as a 20-year-old, he was fighting the curse of being labelled as the next big thing with eerie similariti­es to Ian Bell.

Except for Jasprit Bumrah whose length he occasional­ly failed to read; Pope looked in complete control. His flurry of boundaries at the start was the catalyst to what turned into a beautifull­y paced Test innings. He was able to force Indian bowlers to bowl fuller lengths. And so beautifull­y did he drive that Pope encountere­d no speed-breakers.

It may have worked in Pope’s favour that despite coming late in the series, unlike some of his teammates, he didn’t come straight from 100-ball cricket. He lost his place after the New Zealand series earlier in the year, but with two double-hundreds and an average of 203 in first-class cricket at The Oval since August 2019 to his name, there was no doubt he could bat big.

By the time Bairstow was dismissed, their sixth wicket partnershi­p had already produced 89 runs, the highest in the match so far. Pope then guided England past India’s first innings total during a 71-runs partnershi­p with Moeen Ali.

On the comeback trail, playing at his home ground in the 20th Test of his career, the babyfaced Pope played a mature hand to thwart India’s ambitions of running away with the Test.

The Barmy Army chorus and trumpet sounds grew louder as the day went by in anticipati­on of his hundred. A mental error close to the second new ball meant that wasn’t to be. But by the time Pope was finally dismissed on 81, chopping back a gentle wide away swinger from Thakur, he had won the first innings battle for England.

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