Daily Mail

Five for Ollie after ‘hardest few weeks of my life’

India win passages of play that matter, as good teams do

- MARTIN SAMUEL Chief Sports Writer at Trent Bridge

The good news? The only thing more erratic than english cricket is english weather. It was another day of hokey-cokey at Trent Bridge. In, out, and shaking it all about.

First, england looked like they had clawed their way back into the game, then they lost control of it again. They could be rescued by a strong batting performanc­e over the next 24 hours, or by the weather. On the evidence to here, a strong meteorolog­ical interventi­on seems more likely.

Certainly when the drizzle came again just after 5pm, the way england’s batsmen hurried back to the pavilion suggested they would shake hands on a rain-affected stalemate now. If they could match India’s second innings total — 278 — that would make a fourth innings game of it at least, but the fragility of this england team remains of enormous concern.

even when batting relatively well — surviving a tricky 25 minutes to a belated tea interval — and creeping to 25 without loss before the next delay, england always appear one poor decision away from collapse. Top order techniques remain an issue. england rarely seem settled, rarely comfortabl­e.

‘If you could change one thing about the openers’ techniques, what would it be?’ David Lloyd was asked. ‘Just one?’ he queried incredulou­sly.

The problem for england is that India have won almost all of the passages of play that matter, those hour-long spells that are the crux of any Test. In the afternoon session on day one when england could either have pushed on to build a score, or fallen substantia­lly short, they collapsed.

equally, yesterday, having reduced India to 205 for seven it took another 73 runs to work through the tail, including 33 for the 10th wicket stand. Where would 33 have sat in england’s first innings? It would have been the third-highest partnershi­p. And this was a pairing of Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj. This is not a tail that traditiona­lly wags. This is a Manx cat of a tail.

Yet england allowed them to have fun out there, to swing the bat, to rack up a first innings lead of 95. In a low-scoring game, that is potentiall­y matchdefin­ing.

By pure coincidenc­e, 205 for seven was India’s first innings score in the final of the World Test Championsh­ip against New Zealand in June. What happened next, decided the game’s course.

New Zealand wrapped up the tail for 12 more runs. Ishant Sharma 4; Bumrah 0; Ravindra Jadeja 15.

From that point India were always chasing. New Zealand’s first innings lead was just 32 but when margins are so tight every little helps. India collapsed in their second innings, New Zealand knocked off 140 to win. The distances between the teams will be slight here, too. In that context, those hour-long passages of play when england failed to take their opportunit­y could prove vital.

Good teams, the best teams, make those moments count. Test cricket ebbs and flows. Its disciples depart to the bar, or for a sandwich on a lawn, confident they are not missing much that matters.

Then there are those other times when no one can be persuaded to budge. Spitting feathers in full sunlight, but the concourses stay empty. It was a spell like that when James Anderson got Shardul Thakur for a duck. he had taken the prime wicket, KL Rahul, for 84 in his previous over. The difference between the teams in that moment was 22. england would most certainly have bought that on day one.

By the time the innings was complete, however, it was India’s game to lose; or have snatched from them by the english summer.

What went wrong? Take your pick.

Certainly england’s fielding — a succession of dropped catches and missed run-out opportunit­ies — did not help. Nor did chucking the new ball to Sam Curran for an over that gave up 15 runs, including a six and two fours. Disastrous stuff.

Curran is one of three england players who had not participat­ed in a single red ball game this summer, before arriving in Nottingham to play India. We think of that in terms of rustiness with the bat, but an absence of firstclass bowling counts, too. It is a honed skill shooting out a Test tail, keeping it tight, keeping a lid on the scoring.

Those 15 runs summed up the malaise, england’s failure to take advantage when it mattered. This is a Test that could have been won, with greater focus. Instead, the favourite result, given the forecast, is a draw and if there is a winner it is fancied to be the tourists going to Lord’s with the lead.

Positives? Ollie Robinson took a first Test five-for and then spoke with great maturity about his

transgress­ions on social media, suggesting he will be able to put his unfortunat­e introducti­on to the highest level of the game behind him. There was genuine remorse as he spoke of fearing a two-year ban.

And, as ever, Anderson was a complete joy to behold. There were no doubt a number of paying customers who won’t have felt they got value from their stopstart day at the Test but, seriously, he’s 39: catch him while you can.

With his four-wicket haul Anderson passed Anil Kumble as the third-highest wicket-taker of all time and one can only speculate how many he might have reached had England possessed a more efficient slip cordon.

And do not let anyone argue it is a simple matter of time, and that playing as long as Anderson has is what sets him apart. Surviving, physically, as an athlete is a talent, too. For him to have achieved such longevity in a discipline that has left so many contempora­ries — and much younger men — broken, is also a skill.

Yesterday, it was Anderson who picked off Rahul, Anderson who lifted the spirits, Anderson whose intelligen­ce dragged England into a potentiall­y commanding position, aided bravely by Robinson.

What a player he is, what a player he has been. Where would England be without him? In a worse position than they are now, certainly. It is a sobering thought.

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 ?? PA ?? Dropping the ball: Anderson gives Shami a reprieve
PA Dropping the ball: Anderson gives Shami a reprieve
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SKY SPORTS Butter fingers: Root can’t cling on at first slip

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