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England build lead in third Test vs India

3 minute read

England lost both openers but stretched their lead to 104 runs replying to India's meagre first innings total of 78 on day two of the third Test at Headingley.

JAMES ANDERSON
JAMES ANDERSON Picture: Cameron Spencer/Getty Images

England followed up their dream first day at Headingley with a more even second morning against India, losing openers Rory Burns and Haseeb Hameed but extending their lead to 104.

Wednesday's play at the third Test was one of England's most dominant showings ever, skittling the tourists for 78 after losing the toss then finishing with an unbroken first-wicket stand of 120.

At lunch that had moved to 2-182, with the recalled Dawid Malan (27 not out) and in-form captain Joe Root (21no) at the crease.

Both Burns and Hameed, in their first outing as a duo following Dom Sibley's dropping, resumed with unbeaten half-centuries to their name but neither was able to bank the big score they would have set their sights on overnight.

There were a couple of red herrings early on, with each batsman given a freebie boundary on the pads to ease into their stride, but India's bowling was much improved and the scoring options dried up quickly.

Burns was celebrating his 31st birthday but India were in no mood to gift him a fourth Test hundred to mark the occasion.

Instead he was undone for 61, aiming a crooked bat at a Mohammed Shami delivery that seamed in from round the wicket and flicked the off stump via an inside edge.

The opening stand, England's biggest in five years, was halted at 135 but Hameed was intent on extending his stay.

He was happy to leave and show off his well-rehearsed forward defence, almost entirely stripping away his scoring options.

His new partner Malan took a different approach on his first Test innings for three years, with his first four scoring shots all hitting the boundary boards.

The 33-year-old was off the mark with a cover drive off Shami, welcomed Mohammed Siraj to the attack with a pair of ruthless cuts and also squeezed away a compact square drive.

Hameed looked immovable at the other end and it took a peach of a ball to remove him for 68, left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja turning one past a solid-looking forward press and somehow clipping an off stump that appeared to be covered.

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