Extensive planning on view as Woakes & Co. ditch the full outswinging delivery, opt for hard lengths & tighter lines
BIRMINGHAM: It came as no surprise when England captain Ben Stokes opted to field after winning the toss. The pitch was one of the flattest but Stokes had chalked out a clear plan for his fast bowlers — they would not bowl the regular outswing bowling one expected in English conditions.
Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel.
It was an unconventional approach for the first session of a Test match in England. By the third over of the opening day, it became clear that England’s seamers had moved away from the conventional modes of dismissal in these conditions.
Instead of challenging the outside edge of batters — particularly KL Rahul and Shubman Gill — they focused on cramping them up to choke the free-scoring Indian batsmen. A leg gully and a catching fielder in front of the wicket was a giveaway to the ploy.
Rahul got off to a fluent start in the series by unleasing some free-flowing drives off full and wide outswingers in Leeds. On Wednesday, he was made to work for runs. Rahul could score just two off 26 balls in his stay, which lasted 8.4 overs. There were no drives on offer.
Local boy Chris Woakes, who has built his career on taking the ball away from right handers, resorted to bringing the ball back into Rahul, Karun Nair and Gill. He led the way for Brydon Carse, accused of bowling too full and wide in Leeds, to follow suit and hit the hard lengths and bowl tighter lines.
Before Rahul played on to his stumps off a Woakes rising delivery which nipped back sharply off the seam, the veteran seamer got very close to getting Rahul LBW on the front foot, only to be denied by the onfield umpire’s call after a DRS appeal.
Later, Woakes broke out in an animated reaction when another DRS appeal was turned down, this time after hitting Nair on the pads while shouldering arms. The pacer’s reaction spoke of the extensive planning done by the English camp during the eight-day break after the Headingley Test.
BIRMINGHAM: It came as no surprise when England captain Ben Stokes opted to field after winning the toss. The pitch was one of the flattest but Stokes had chalked out a clear plan for his fast bowlers — they would not bowl the regular outswing bowling one expected in English conditions.
Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel.
It was an unconventional approach for the first session of a Test match in England. By the third over of the opening day, it became clear that England’s seamers had moved away from the conventional modes of dismissal in these conditions.
Instead of challenging the outside edge of batters — particularly KL Rahul and Shubman Gill — they focused on cramping them up to choke the free-scoring Indian batsmen. A leg gully and a catching fielder in front of the wicket was a giveaway to the ploy.
Rahul got off to a fluent start in the series by unleasing some free-flowing drives off full and wide outswingers in Leeds. On Wednesday, he was made to work for runs. Rahul could score just two off 26 balls in his stay, which lasted 8.4 overs. There were no drives on offer.
Local boy Chris Woakes, who has built his career on taking the ball away from right handers, resorted to bringing the ball back into Rahul, Karun Nair and Gill. He led the way for Brydon Carse, accused of bowling too full and wide in Leeds, to follow suit and hit the hard lengths and bowl tighter lines.
Before Rahul played on to his stumps off a Woakes rising delivery which nipped back sharply off the seam, the veteran seamer got very close to getting Rahul LBW on the front foot, only to be denied by the onfield umpire’s call after a DRS appeal.
Later, Woakes broke out in an animated reaction when another DRS appeal was turned down, this time after hitting Nair on the pads while shouldering arms. The pacer’s reaction spoke of the extensive planning done by the English camp during the eight-day break after the Headingley Test.
You may also like
'If Marathi or Maharashtra is insulted ... ': Aaditya Thackeray issues 'things can escalate' warning; language row heats up
Diogo Jota was days away from Liverpool return as reason for fatal car trip revealed
Keir Starmer's plan to 'rewire' NHS explained – why you won't have to go to hospital
Torrid co-star affair rocked All Creatures Great and Small behind the scenes
Modi govt's record on environment protection not reliable: Jairam Ramesh