India vs England: Rishabh Pant treated James Anderson as if he was a spinner, says awestruck Sunil G
India vs England: Rishabh Pant treated James Anderson as if he was a spinner, says awestruck Sunil Gavaskar
Rishabh Pant s third Test hundred put India in the driver s seat as they took an 89-run lead over England with 3 wickets still in hand on Day 2 of the fourth and final Test in Ahmedabad.
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Courtesy of BCCI
HIGHLIGHTS
Rishabh Pant scored 101 to bail India out of trouble on Day 2 of the 4th Test
Pant and Washington Sundar s 113-run partnership helped India reach 294 for 7 at stumps
In 1926, a seventeenth-century trunk containing over 2000 unclaimed letters was bequeathed to the Dutch postal museum. The letters were closed using an ancient technique called letterlocking, in which the writing paper is intricately folded and secured to become its own envelopes. Now an international team of researchers has virtually unfolded and unlocked the contents of one of the letters and the findings were published on March 2 in
Nature Communications.
At a meeting in Srinagar, the board, chaired by Labour and Employment Minister Santosh Kumar Gangwar, “recommended 8.50% annual rate of interest to be credited on EPF accumulations in members’ accounts for the financial year 2020-21”, a statement by EPFO said.
3rd Test: Patel takes 6 wkts as India bowl out England for 112
Ahmedabad: March 3: Spinner Axar Patel made the batsmen play the ball every time he bowled which is what made him lethal during the second and third Test matches between India and England, said veteran spinner Harbhajan Singh.
Harbhajan, 40, said that the spinners in India are taught to always hit the stump and make adjustments to do so depending upon the amount of spin that the pitch is aiding.
“At the beginning of our journey, the spinners are taught to hit the stumps the ball should hit the stumps after the spin. If the wicket has spin then the bowler needs to judge how much spin is required, and if you’re missing the stumps constantly then the it’s the bowler’s fault. If there is a spinning track or any other track, there is always a challenge to bowl,” Harbhajan said on Star Sports.
Virat Kohli and R Ashwin. (BCCI Photo)
NEW DELHI: After taking a 2-1 lead in the four-match series, the Virat Kohli-led Indian team will aim to sign off their red-ball campaign on a high when they lock horns with England in the fourth and final Test in Ahmedabad, starting Thursday.
India need a 2-1 or 3-1 series win to make it to the World Test Championship final against New Zealand. The final is scheduled to be played in June at Lord s.
With Kohli s men raring to make it 3-1 against England, multiple members of both teams are within touching distance of personal milestones in the fourth Test.
Cricket News: From a turner to a rank turner to a two-faced turner - the series has implored global theories, ranging from horticulture and pedology, to invoking th