Oval Test: England need 291 more on the final day

Rory Burns, left, and Haseeb Hameed gave England a solid start. Photo: Twitter/ICC

London: England's under-fire opening pair made a confident start after an indomitable Shadul Thakur and a calm Rishabh Pant ensured a 367-run lead for India as the fourth Test entered an engrossing home stretch.

Haseeb Hameed (43 batting, 85 balls) and Rory Burns (31 batting, 109 balls) put on 77 runs in 32 overs on a placid track that showed little signs of wear and tear after Thakur (60 off 72 balls) and Pant (50 off 107 balls) helped India put on a commendable 466 in their second essay.

With 291 more runs required on the final day, England would at least fancy a draw if not a victory on the fifth day as the pitch has nothing on offer for the bowlers.

More so, Ravindra Jadeja (0/28 in 13 overs), whose primary skill has been overlooked by the team management, looked pedestrian during the overs that he bowled during the penultimate evening. A few balls did turn but Burns tackled them with ease.

The only bowler who made some impact was Jasprit Bumrah (7-3-11-0), who at least tried to exert some pressure on the openers.

However, India still have their nose ahead in the game largely due to the performance of the lower middle-order where Thakur the batsman exceeded everyone's expectations with a second half-century in the match.

Shardul Thakur scored his second fifty of the match. Photo: Twitter/BCCI


He was well complemented by Pant, who finally got some runs under his belt showing admirable restraint and sense of responsibility during the duo's 100-run stand.

Credit should also go to Umesh Yadav (25) and Bumrah (24), who also played their cameos in taking the target past 350-run mark.

Had Thakur-Pant not played their part, England would have ended up chasing a lesser total after yet another all-too familiar middle order collapse.

From 296/3, within 10 over space, it became 312/6 before Thakur and Pant joined forces.

It did help that the pitch became flatter as the day progressed and under bright sunshine, strokeplay became easier for both the batters as they could hit through the line.

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