Business Day

Rohit, Jadeja steady India ship

- Amlan Chakrabort­y

Rajkot — Captain Rohit Sharma and middle-order batter Ravindra Jadeja smashed defiant hundreds to pull India out of the doldrums and into a comfortabl­e 326/5 on the opening day of the third Test against England on Thursday.

India were reeling at 33/3 inside the opening hour after Mark Wood proved the value of extra pace on a docile track at the Saurashtra Cricket Associatio­n Stadium.

But Rohit and Jadeja rebuilt the innings with a 204-run stand to drag the hosts back into the contest.

Jadeja was batting on 110 at stumps, his fourth Test hundred, with nightwatch­man Kuldeep Yadav on one at the other end.

Rohit ’ s stellar 131 contained three sixes, 14 fours and plenty of drama. The opener suffered a blow to his helmet, was dropped in the slips and succeeded in having an lbw decision against him reversed en route to his 11th Test hundred.

With the five-match series poised at 1-1, Rohit’s decision to bat on a flat surface was hardly surprising but Wood tormented the batters with his express speed.

The fast bowler had Yashasvi Jaiswal (10) caught in the slip in his second over and Shubman Gill fell caught behind for a duck in Wood’s next.

SPIN

England captain Ben Stokes, playing his 100th Test, introduced spin in the ninth over and was rewarded immediatel­y as Tom Hartley dismissed Rajat Patidar for five.

Wood continued to bowl with relentless hostility at the other end, hitting Rohit on his helmet grille on one occasion.

The opener got a life on 27 when he edged Hartley and Joe Root spilt the catch at slip.

Rohit was adjudged lbw to James Anderson but the decision was reversed after replays confirmed that the ball had hit bat first.

Rohit and Jadeja denied England a breakthrou­gh in the second session dragging India back into the contest.

Rohit took 157 balls to bring up his hundred and the muted celebratio­n indicated his resolve to carry on but Stokes and Wood combined to scupper that plan.

The short-ball tactics they pursued against Rohit paid off as the batter slapped the ball from Wood to Stokes at midwicket.

Debutant Sarfaraz Khan shrugged off early jitters and raced to a 48-ball fifty before his entertaini­ng knock of 62 was cut short.

Jadeja was on 99 when his hesitation led to Sarfaraz being run out. A furious Rohit was seen hurling his cap on the floor in the pavilion after the dismissal.

Wicketkeep­er Dhruv Jurel also made his Test debut for India in the match. /

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