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ENGLAND HIGH ON HIMALAYAS IN CRICKET’S MOST PICTURESQU­E LOCATION

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Dharamsala: The “stunning” Himalayan cricket ground beneath snowcapped peaks for this week’s fifth Test against India can help sweeten the disappoint­ment for England that the series has already been lost.

Northern India’s beautiful hill town of Dharamsala is the de facto capital of exiled Tibetans and home to their Buddhist spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

It is also the site of the extraordin­ary Himachal Pradesh Cricket Associatio­n Stadium.

England batsman Jonny Bairstow, who will win his 100th Test at the scenic stadium today, said the amazing location was more spectacula­r even than Cape Town’s ground at the foot of Table Mountain in South Africa.

“It’s absolutely stunning here, I don’t think there’s a more picturesqu­e ground in the world,” Bairstow told reporters.

The backdrop is the Dhauladhar mountain range, where peaks soar to more than 4,600 metres (15,090 feet).

The pitch sits at an altitude of 1,317 metres (4,320 feet), just a stone’s throw below the summit of Britain’s tallest mountain Ben Nevis.

It is not the world’s highest internatio­nal stadium – Johannesbu­rg, Nairobi and Kathmandu are all higher – but few other pitches are ringed by such towering peaks. “Cape Town is one of my favourite places but when you take a moment, look up at the mountains with the snow and everything that goes with it up here in Dharamsala, it’s quite incredible”, Bairstow said. Some 5,000 England fans have arrived, packing out hotels and ready to watch the match, despite India’s unbeatable 3-1 lead in the five-match series

“It is a beautiful venue and I have come here because of that,” said Gordon Bacon, an 80-year-old who travelled from Durham in northern England and also watched India’s five-wicket win in the fourth Test in Ranchi.

“It’s going to be a great atmosphere because there are going to be a lot of England supporters,” Bacon added. “It’s a pity that we lost the series already, but it is still going to be a great spectacle.” Some experts suggest the high altitude makes the ball faster, potentiall­y aiding England’s veteran seamer James Anderson to achieve his two wickets needed to reach 700.

But the mountains will also usher down icy winds from the glaciers above, with forecaster­s suggesting the mercury will hover just above freezing today, with a risk of sleet.

“Let’s just hope for nice weather, and it will be fine,” Bacon added.

Indian architect Arun Loomba, 71, had wanted the 23,000-spectator venue stadium to “gel with nature”, he told the

Indian Express newspaper. With a nod to the local community, where red-robed monks crowd the town’s streets in between prayers, the striking triple-pointed pavilion roof elements derived from Tibet’s Buddhist temples.

The stadium was the brainchild of India’s Minister for Sports Anurag Thakur, former president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India, who transforme­d a rocky scrubland where cattle once grazed.

It will be only the second Test to be played in the venue, after India beat Australia by eight wickets in 2017.

England won the first internatio­nal match played at the ground in 2013, beating India by seven wickets in a 50-over match.

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