Key events
145th over: England 588-8 (Stokes 99, Carse 12) And still they wait. Stokes faced three balls in that over from Washington but was unable to get past the infield.
“I am probably being crazy here…” begins Phil Crockford, “but would Stokes declare while he is in the 90s? His mantra seems very focused on the team winning, and him sacrificing a personal accomplishment if he felt it made strategic sense seems very Stokes-like.”
I don’t think that’s crazy at all. If the circumstances were right – if, for eg, he wanted a few overs before a break – he would definitely do it. I think Imran Khan is the only captain to declare on himself in the nineties in a Test match, against Sri Lanka in the early 1990s, though Wiaan Mulder is top of this particular selflessness list.
144th over: England 587-8 (Stokes 99, Carse 11) Stokes cuffs Bumrah through mid-off for three to move to 99. It might have gone all the way but for a slight touch from the diving Siraj.
Carse inside-edges for a single, giving Stokes two deliveries at the end of the over to get the job done. He can’t, not yet. And he comes perilously close to falling for 99 when Bumrah straightens a beauty past his frisky drive.
143rd over: England 583-8 (Stokes 96, Carse 10) Stokes plays responsibly, taking two singles from Washinton’s over.
142nd over: England 580-8 (Stokes 94, Carse 9) Carse rarely hangs around with the bat. He slaps Bumrah through backward point for four, plays and misses at another nose-botherer and steers three more behind square.
Stokes takes a single to keep strike. He’s 94 not out, facing a spinner. Oh to hear his internal monologue right now.
“As you are overwhelmed by goats I will not make any issue at all with the reference to the improvement in Root’s ‘conversation rate’,” writes Ian Copestake. “But when you are already joining the batting greats, speaking faster does not seem worth bragging about.”
I want to know how John Moschitta Jr. dealt with the nervous nineties.
141st over: England 571-8 (Stokes 92, Carse 2) The lesser-spotted Washington Sundar comes into the attack and is edged for two by Carse. Washington’s drift has trouble England throughout this series.
“Instead of the GOoat debates, can we switch to Emma John’s view in today’s Guardian on the use of the term ‘Proper England’?” writes John Starbuck. “If all goes well in this match, it could be a mantra to oust Bazball as a definition, but include record-breaking deeds too.”
So you’re saying it’s the Goat of definitions? John, have mercy!
140th over: England 568-8 (Stokes 91, Carse 0) A no-ball from Bumrah flies past Jurel for four byes. The Dawson wicket was a superb bit of bowling from Bumrah, who is back on song this morning. But when you trail by over 200 on first innings, uneven bounce is often terminal.
In fact, replays show the delivery that bowled Dawson was shorter than the one that whistled past his hooter. It should be the other way round.
WICKET! England 563-8 (Dawson b Bumrah 26)
A wicket for India, but they may not feel like celebrating. Bumrah bowled two balls to Dawson, both of similar length. The first exploded past Dawson’s nose, the second kept a bit low and thumped into the top of the stumps.
139th over: England 562-7 (Stokes 90, Dawson 26) Siraj continues to Stokes, who slams a flamboyant, hold-the-pose drive between extra cover and mid-off. Shot!
A quick single moves Stokes to 90, then Dawson swivel-pulls beautifully for four. It’s an understatement to say Dawson is not a Test No8.
138th over: England 551-7 (Stokes 83, Dawson 21) Bumrah looks refreshed after a decent night’s sleep and pleads for LBW when Dawson is hit on the pad by a violent nipbacker. It was probably too high and Gill decides not to risk India’s last review.
“A crushing defeat here will take the life out of this fledgling Indian team and I feel sad for it,” writes Krishnamoorthy V. “Kneejerk is the mantra and moderation is a four letter word to the Indian selectors. I shall start penning my requiem to quite a few talented but unfortunate players.”
Do you think? Some of the peripheral players will be dropped, and the coach Gautam Gambhir must be concerned after a desperate run of results, but they should still build a side around Jaiswal, Rahul, Gill, Pant and Washington.
137th over: England 550-7 (Stokes 83, Dawson 21) Siraj – who like Bumrah, and Stokes for that matter, was struggling with injury last night – is fit enough to open the bowling. Stokes moves into the eighties with a terrific boundary, flashed through the covers on the walk. Those runs make this Stokes’s highest Test score since Lord’s 2023.
136th over: England 545-7 (Stokes 78, Dawson 21) A run-out referral in the first over of the day. Stokes, who struggled with cramp last night, tested his body by taking a quick single to mid-on off Bumrah. A smart underarm throw from Kamboj hit the stumps and the umpires sent it upstairs. Umpire Siraj raised his finger to give Stokes out, but the replays showed he was home, just about, before the bails were broken.
“We’re very fortunate,” says Gary Naylor, “to be watching England’s greatest captain and England’s greatest senior pro in the same team.”
Oh Gary, please no. After yesterday’s longevity fiasco, I can’t be dragged into another Goat War. Have mercy!
The players walk out on an overcast morning in Manchester. It’s likely to stay that way all day. As well as England have performed, they’ve had some luck with the weather.
“I’m looking forward to a home win at Old Trafford,” says Andrew Goudie. “They’ve been few and far between recently.”
One poignant thing about Root’s comments on managing risk are that they could easily have come from his mentor, another middle-order batter who became a chameleon in the second half of his career. Like Root, Graham Thorpe created a bespoke plan for every phase of every innings. On the day Root became the second highest runscorer in Tests, the inquiry into Thorpe’s death came to a conclusion.
Joe Root on his evolution as a batter
[On the improvement in his conversation rate] I went away during Covid. I actually spoke to Nass quite a bit (!). I said, ‘Can I get some footage off Sky and look at modes of dismissal?’. I wanted to see if there were any trends – first 20 balls, from 50 runs to 100.
I’ve tried to look at the game slightly differently. In the first part of my career a lot of it was about my technique. Where my hands and head are. Am I lined up? Is my trigger tight?
In the second phase it’s been more about managing risk, and thinking ‘How can I eliminate as many modes of dismissal as possible with the highest output?’ Sometimes the conditions are so extreme that the risk has to go up. Whatever the biggest threat is that day – bowled, LBW, caught in the slips – how can I eliminate it while still giving myself as many run-scoring opportunities as possible.
It’s a lot of information to process and it comes through experience. It’s difficult to do that until you know your game really well, what your strengths and weaknesses are. It comes from trial and error, from getting things wrong.
I think you have to see the game for what it is. It’s easy to get too emotional, be too hard on yourself or feel sorry for yourself. You have to see it for what it is, be very honest about it and then just try to put that into practice.
Joe Root on becoming the second highest runscorer in Tests
It is pretty cool. You look at the names on that list, they’re all people who as a kid growing up I’d try to be in the garden or in the driveway at our local club. We’d play mini Test matches: me and my brother and anyone else who was knocking around.
One day I’d try and be Ricky Ponting, the next day Kumar Sangakkara or Brian Lara – not left-handed but the same backlift, all of that. Even to be mentioned in the same sentence as these guys is a pinch-yourself moment.
The 2005 Ashes was huge for my era of player – [turns to Ricky Ponting] watching the hundred you got here and seeing everything unfold.
[Did you know the numbers?] You can’t avoid it, they’re everywhere! You try to put it out of your mind. It’s easy to get caught up in the stuff but at the end of the day you’re playing against India in one of the biggest series there is… yesterday was one of the most crucial days of the whole series. It’s not about you, it’s about winning a game and getting your team in a position to do that.
In the 148-year history of Test cricket, 3211 men have batted. Only one has scored more runs than Joe Root.
Ali Martin’s day three report
Root is as team-first a cricketer as they come – No Ego Joe, if you will – and will likely have drawn greater satisfaction from England’s position at stumps. It was a commanding one, too, the hosts closing on 544 for seven and leading by 186 runs. There is a bit of rain forecast to arrive on Sunday but Shubman Gill’s men will need to get there first. Given their bereft state and Rishabh Pant’s broken foot, it is hard to envisage a soggy draw.
TFI Friday? For India, it was more a case of TF Friday’s Over; on the 18th day of an unyielding series, it all became a bit too much.
Preamble
Morning one, morning all. It’s a big day in the north, love. England could take a decisive grip on the series, maybe even win it. India could serve notice of their intention to kick things down the M6 until the final Test at the Oval on Thursday.
England resume on 544 for 7, a lead of 186, with Ben Stokes on 77 and Liam Dawson on 21. Stokes hasn’t scored a Test hundred since his serene rampage against Australia at Lord’s two years ago. A ton and a victory would put the creamy glaze on one of Stokes’ greatest series in an England shirt.