India vs England - First Test at Mohali
Indian XI
SS Das
Deep Dasgupta
Rahul Dravid
Sachin Tendulkar
Sourav Ganguly
VVS Laxman
Sanjay Bangar
Anil Kumble
Harbhajan Singh
Iqbal Siddiqui
Tinu Yohannan
English XI
Nick Knight
Marcus Trescothick
Alec Stewart
Graham Thorpe
Nasser Hussain
Craig White
Graeme Swann
Chris Read
Andy Caddick
Alan Mullally
Phil Tufnell
- - -
England win the toss and choose to bat
- - -
With the Mohali track looking dry, but - at the start of the game at least - in tact, it was vital for the England captain to win the toss and get first use of the pitch before it deteriorated. They would then deploy their two spinners as the pitch started to break up and spin more. India, meanwhile, did not have a bowling attack that looked likely to thrive on a day one pitch: Kumble and Harbhajan are two very good spinners, but a seam attack of Siddiqui, Bangar and Yohannan wouldn't impress even a county coach.
Of all the Indian seamers, it was Iqbal Siddiqui who was least bad on the first day. Not only did he take the important wicket of Nick Knight with the first new ball, but he also got Graeme Swann to edge behind using the second one. At all other times though, the main challenge faced by the English batters was one of spin. Marcus Trescothick stood up to it pretty well for 49, and Alec Stewart made a successful return to number three by grinding out a composed 71. However, the real star of the show was Graham Thorpe: arguably England's brightest batting talent, Thorpe breezed to his 11th Test century and then knuckled down and made his very first Test 150. For the latter half of his innings, he found excellent support from England's newest wicket-keeper, Chris Read. Batting all the way down at number eight, Read made a very disciplined 94 not out: the hightest score by an England wicket-keeper since the 1980s, and an innings that pushed the visitors' total all the way up to 483.
For the England seam bowlers, the dry and slow pitch offered very little and it didn't take long for Nick Knight to turn to his spinners. For Tufnell, this has been a trying period of his career; he is currently "enjoying" a dozen-game streak without a five-wicket haul to his name, and his place in the team has begun to look under threat from Swann. On this occasion though, he rolled back the years and immediately started picking up Indian wickets. First Das, then Dasgupta fell to the legendary left-armer, before Swann got into the act with the wickets of Dravid and Ganguly. Tufnell hit back once again, dismissing Tendulkar and Bangar within a single over to leave VVS Laxman to try to fix things with only the tail-enders for company. He did squeeze out an extra 100 runs for India mostly off his own bat, but it still wasn't enough to drag the home side past the follow-on mark.
Not that that mattered exactly - Nick Knight opted not to enforce it, preferring to retain last use of a deteriorating wicket and instead instructing his team to go out and build an unassailable advantage as fast as possible. Strong innings from Trescothick (42), Thorpe (61) and Read (36 not out) were more than sufficient, and England were able to declare and set India an unlikely 426 to win from the last four sessions.
Very disappointingly for England, their bowlers really lacked impact in the second innings. The dead-batted efforts of Deep Dasgupta and Rahul Dravid ate up a staggeringly dull 45 overs for fewer than 60 runs, and it took all of the English spinners' skill to prise breakthroughs from that partnership. Their reward for doing so was getting to bowl at Sachin Tendulkar, who hadn't quite got the memo about dead-batting everything. He plundered a serene century, constantly picking gaps in the ultra-aggressive field to advance his score. He would eventually fall to Mullally, but by that point there simply wasn't enough time for England to force a win. On the bright side, there also wasn't time for Ganguly to force a century, but it remains honours even going into the second Test.
Indian XI
SS Das
Deep Dasgupta
Rahul Dravid
Sachin Tendulkar
Sourav Ganguly
VVS Laxman
Sanjay Bangar
Anil Kumble
Harbhajan Singh
Iqbal Siddiqui
Tinu Yohannan
English XI
Nick Knight
Marcus Trescothick
Alec Stewart
Graham Thorpe
Nasser Hussain
Craig White
Graeme Swann
Chris Read
Andy Caddick
Alan Mullally
Phil Tufnell
- - -
England win the toss and choose to bat
- - -
With the Mohali track looking dry, but - at the start of the game at least - in tact, it was vital for the England captain to win the toss and get first use of the pitch before it deteriorated. They would then deploy their two spinners as the pitch started to break up and spin more. India, meanwhile, did not have a bowling attack that looked likely to thrive on a day one pitch: Kumble and Harbhajan are two very good spinners, but a seam attack of Siddiqui, Bangar and Yohannan wouldn't impress even a county coach.
Of all the Indian seamers, it was Iqbal Siddiqui who was least bad on the first day. Not only did he take the important wicket of Nick Knight with the first new ball, but he also got Graeme Swann to edge behind using the second one. At all other times though, the main challenge faced by the English batters was one of spin. Marcus Trescothick stood up to it pretty well for 49, and Alec Stewart made a successful return to number three by grinding out a composed 71. However, the real star of the show was Graham Thorpe: arguably England's brightest batting talent, Thorpe breezed to his 11th Test century and then knuckled down and made his very first Test 150. For the latter half of his innings, he found excellent support from England's newest wicket-keeper, Chris Read. Batting all the way down at number eight, Read made a very disciplined 94 not out: the hightest score by an England wicket-keeper since the 1980s, and an innings that pushed the visitors' total all the way up to 483.
For the England seam bowlers, the dry and slow pitch offered very little and it didn't take long for Nick Knight to turn to his spinners. For Tufnell, this has been a trying period of his career; he is currently "enjoying" a dozen-game streak without a five-wicket haul to his name, and his place in the team has begun to look under threat from Swann. On this occasion though, he rolled back the years and immediately started picking up Indian wickets. First Das, then Dasgupta fell to the legendary left-armer, before Swann got into the act with the wickets of Dravid and Ganguly. Tufnell hit back once again, dismissing Tendulkar and Bangar within a single over to leave VVS Laxman to try to fix things with only the tail-enders for company. He did squeeze out an extra 100 runs for India mostly off his own bat, but it still wasn't enough to drag the home side past the follow-on mark.
Not that that mattered exactly - Nick Knight opted not to enforce it, preferring to retain last use of a deteriorating wicket and instead instructing his team to go out and build an unassailable advantage as fast as possible. Strong innings from Trescothick (42), Thorpe (61) and Read (36 not out) were more than sufficient, and England were able to declare and set India an unlikely 426 to win from the last four sessions.
Very disappointingly for England, their bowlers really lacked impact in the second innings. The dead-batted efforts of Deep Dasgupta and Rahul Dravid ate up a staggeringly dull 45 overs for fewer than 60 runs, and it took all of the English spinners' skill to prise breakthroughs from that partnership. Their reward for doing so was getting to bowl at Sachin Tendulkar, who hadn't quite got the memo about dead-batting everything. He plundered a serene century, constantly picking gaps in the ultra-aggressive field to advance his score. He would eventually fall to Mullally, but by that point there simply wasn't enough time for England to force a win. On the bright side, there also wasn't time for Ganguly to force a century, but it remains honours even going into the second Test.
I've also included a Player of the Season award in the style of the Allan Border Medal - the Barrington Medal.
Standings
1. Graham Thorpe - 3 points (+3)
2. Chris Read - 2 points (+2)
3. Phil Tufnell - 1 point (+1)
Drawn or lost match
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Best player - 3 points
2nd best player - 2 points
3rd best player - 1 point
Won match
Best player - 5 points
2nd best player - 3 points
3rd best player - 2 points
4th best player - 1 point
Standings
1. Graham Thorpe - 3 points (+3)
2. Chris Read - 2 points (+2)
3. Phil Tufnell - 1 point (+1)