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Wednesday 9 July 2014

1st Test Day 1 England v India 259/4

IND 259/4

FOW: Dhawan c Prior b Anderson IND 33/1

Now then, if you're going to take wickets on this deck, it will require this sort of brilliance. James Anderson, pretty listless so far, changes the angle to Shikhar Dhawan and produces a beauty from around the wicket. Nibble away, drawing the left-hander in to the shot, with a thick edge brilliantly taken one-handed by a diving Matt Prior. From nowhere, England have a breakthrough.

WICKET- Pujara c Bell b Anderson 38 (Ind 106-2)
What a catch! We talked about the brilliance required for England to take wickets and Ian Bell has pulled off off magic moment. James Anderson the bowler, finding some reverse swing back in to Cheteshwar Pujara. No fully forward, Pujara pokes the ball towards silly mid on, where Bell takes off, goalkeeper-style, to his right, plucking a wonderful one-hander out of the air. Great stuff.

WICKET- Kohli c Bell b Broad 1 (Ind 107-3)
What was in the England lunch? They've got another, the huge wicket of Virat Kohli. This time it's Stuart Broad, who has bowled well without reward. Outside off stump, the should I, shouldn't I play area for the batsman. Kohli prods, getting a thick edge to that man Ian Bell again, with the catch being pouched low at second slip. Brilliant stuff.

WICKET - Rahane c Cook b Plunkett 32 (Ind 178-4)
The brigade can desist for now Chris. Rahane is on his way in bizarre fashion. He had fended one just short of Cook at silly point earlier in the over but this one came off the toe end of the bat as he tried to pull and nestled comfortably in the midriff of England's under-fire captain. A change in his fortunes perhaps.
Industrious bowling and athletic fielding helped England restrict India to 259-4 on a lifeless Trent Bridge pitch on the first day of the five-Test series.
In conditions more akin to Nagpur than Nottingham, India opener Murali Vijay batted throughout the day to score an accomplished unbeaten 122, and captain Mahendra Dhoni was 50 not out in an unbroken partnership of 81.
But England's quartet of seamers never lost heart, responding well to a difficult morning as skipper Alastair Cook was rewarded for attacking field placings with quick wickets after lunch and tea.
Stuart Broad was the pick of the bowlers with 1-26 off 19 overs at his home ground, while there were two wickets for James Anderson and one for Liam Plunkett. Ben Stokes, recalled in place of Chris Jordan, bowled 19 economical overs.
Once again, however, the absence of frontline spinner from the hosts' attack was exposed, as Moeen Ali conceded 50 off nine overs and was dismissively crashed for a straight six by Vijay in the final hour of the day.
Moeen was one of four players with fewer than five Test caps in an England side desperately seeking to end a run of eight Tests without a victory.
India are also a team in transition. Since their 4-0 defeat by England in 2011, star batsmen Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman have all retired, leaving six of their top seven playing their first Test on English soil.
The unfamiliar surroundings did not unnerve Vijay, who got off to a flyer with three fours in the first over of the day before settling down to anchor the innings.
He spent 13 balls on 99 before bringing up his fourth Test century off 214 balls with a flick to square leg.
The morning had belonged entirely to India as they scored 106 runs for the loss of one wicket, that of Shikhar Dhawan, superbly caught one-handed by wicketkeeper Matt Prior off Anderson.
The pitch was so benign that by the end of the session Broad was bowling with only a single slip in place.
England's day was revived by an inspired field placing by under-pressure captain Cook.
Clearly bowling to a plan in the second over after lunch, Anderson held back some pace and drew a mistimed drive from Cheteshwar Pujara which was athletically taken by Ian Bell at silly mid-on.
With a Test average of 50.36 at number four, the stylish Virat Kohli has been talked about as the natural heir to Tendulkar. But his first Test innings in England lasted only eight balls as he edged Broad to Bell at second slip.
Rattled by the sudden momentum shift and the extra step in the stride of England's seamers, India knuckled down and barely scored a run for the next hour.
They successfully took the sting out of England's attack and began scoring more freely later in the session before taking tea on 106-2.
Cook brought himself in at silly point to greet the batsmen after tea and once again the change of tactic paid instant dividends.
Ajinkya Rahane aimed a pull shot at Plunkett but the ball deflected off the toe-end of his bat straight into Cook's hands.
England's pursuit of further wickets was thwarted by Vijay and Dhoni.
Dhoni, who is yet to score a Test hundred outside Asia, was characteristically positive as he brought up his 30th Test fifty from 64 deliveries in the final over of the day.

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