How England beat India 4-1 in 2018: Virat Kohli, James Anderson and Alastair Cook shine in fine series

Alastair Cook said it would have been tough to script his final Test appearance after he hit a century in his 161st and final game

What they said – Nasser Hussain: “Sam Curran has won England this game. India might say Kohli got 200 runs but who turned this game around? A 20-year-old. It’s a phenomenal achievement.

“He changed the course of two innings. He came on with India 50-0 and pitched it up, swung it and got four for nothing and he then went in with England 87-7.

“After his first game you thought he was maybe a bits-and-pieces cricketer and wondered whether he was quick enough, could move it enough and if he was a proper batsman.

“I always used to say ‘pick someone on their character more than what they are showing in county cricket’. He has character in abundance.”

Second Test, Lord’s
Scorecard: England 397 beat India 107 and 130 by an innings and 159 runs

James Anderson ripped through India to the tune of 5-20 in the first innings and then returned 4-23 in the second, seeing him secure a century of wickets in his 23 Tests at Lord’s, falling just short of a first-ever Test 10-for at the ground.

It wasn’t good enough to earn him the man-of-the-match award though, with the recalled Chris Woakes pipping him to that prize, etching his name on the honours board with a fine maiden Test ton.

Chris Woakes fired with bat and bat for England at Lord’s

“Anyone you speak to will tell you that you just turn up here and it’s incredible, from the lunches to the dressing room, to walking through the Long Room and going out on the field.

“It’s such a special place to play and you just get a real buzz when you come here. I think that probably helps me. There’s not many grounds where you like both ends but this is one of those places.”

Third Test, Trent Bridge
Scorecard: India 329 and 352 beat England 161 and 317 by 203 runs

India needed just 17 balls on day five to wrap up a 203-run victory to halt England in their tracks and begin talk of one of the great series comebacks of all time.

There was little hint of the mayhem to come as India passed 300 on day one – Kohli falling three runs short of his second century of the series before being dismissed by Adil Rashid.

England’s top-order trauma drained throughout the entire side as the home side lost all 10 wickets in the afternoon session on day two – Hardik Pandya claimed his maiden five-for in just 29 balls.

Kohli rammed home India’s first innings advantage, making no mistake this time in making three figures (although he was missed on 93), and while England’s openers did see out the day – a record target of 521 was as tough an ask as they come.

Jos Buttler (106) and Ben Stokes (62) defied India in a fifth-wicket stand of 169 which helped to take the third Test into a final day – Buttler confirming Ed Smith’s faith in him and describing his maiden ton as his proudest moment.

This was India’s moment though – Jasprit Bumrah weakening England’s grip with his second Test five-for – before Ashwin outfoxed Anderson with the 17th ball of day five.

India’s aim? Simple. To become only the second team in Test history to overturn a 2-0 deficit and triumph in a five-match series.

What they said – Sir Ian Botham: “Let’s be honest, India have outplayed England in this game. They out-batted them, out-bowled them and out-fielded them.

“After England won the first two Tests, it could have become a very one-sided series but with India winning at Trent Bridge, it is all to play for again.

“One positive for England was Jos Buttler. If there was any debate to be had over whether he has what it takes to be a Test player, he put it to bed with his century on day four. Personally, I never had any doubt.”

Fourth Test, Ageas Bowl
Scorecard: England 246 and 271 beat India 273 and 184 by 60 runs

England’s response was to recall James Vince – as cover for Jonny Bairstow – as well as Sam Curran and Moeen Ali, but Vince was benched as England imploded again to 246 all out, Root contributing just four batting at number three.

On his Test return, 20-year-old Curran came to the crease with the hosts perilously placed on 86-6 and proved England’s saviour again with a Test-best 78.

Cheteshwar Pujara’s (132no) 15th Test ton should have put India out of sight but Moeen Ali had other ideas, striking four times in three overs either side of tea on his way to 5-63.

Buttler was back in the thick of the action, striking an impressive 69, while Root made 48 before being run out having been replaced at three by Ali – all rather emblematic of a side in a muddle.

But that very same side completed a third straight home Test series win over India as Ali took 4-71 to end with match figures of 9-134 – India rolled over for less than 200 despite a 101-run fourth-wicket stand from Virat Kohli (58) and Ajinkya Rahane (51).

What they said – Ben Stokes: “I am buzzing. We came here with a bit of pressure after the way we performed at Trent Bridge.

“Credit to everyone, especially in the third innings where I thought we could easily have crumbled. We showed real fight and put all the demons out of our mind to put a score on the board.

“I found another aspect to my game, trying to dig in and change to whatever the game is offering to me at the time. I thought time in the middle was crucial and that the runs would come.”

Ben Stokes said that he was ‘buzzing’ after England wrapped up a series win over India with a Test to spare Ben Stokes said that he was ‘buzzing’ after England wrapped up a series win over India with a Test to spare

Fifth Test, the Oval
Scorecard: England 332 and 423-8 declared beat India 292 and 345 by 118 runs

Could Cookie shine on his farewell appearance? The former skipper dug in after receiving a guard of honour from India on his way to the wicket – but a first-innings ton eluded him when he chopped on for 71.

His knock, though, was the mainstay of a meagre first day 198-7 so it needed an enterprising 98-run stand for the ninth wicket between Buttler, reaching his fifth Test fifty of the summer, and Stuart Broad to get England back on track.

Ravindra Jadeja, playing in his first Test of the series – to the surprise of most, showed impressive resistance to steer India to a first-innings deficit of just 40 with an unbeaten 86. Keaton Jennings ended the series with an average of just 18.11 – England ending day three on 114-2 with Cook unbeaten on 46.

The opener produced the fairy-tale finish every England fan desired as he played with greater fluency than at any point in the series and earned a rapturous and heartfelt ovation as he brought up his hundred just before lunch and went on to make 147 before leaving the field to further acclaim.

The feel-good factor continued for England despite a battling 204-run stand between KL Rahul (149) and Rishabh Pant (114) who gave India hope of saving the game, and at one stage thoughts even turned to the prospect of a world-record chase of 464, before Adil Rashid (2-63) produced a ripper to bowl Rahul.

Adil Rashid rolled over KL Rahul with a superb delivery that turned 10 degrees! Adil Rashid rolled over KL Rahul with a superb delivery that turned 10 degrees!

That left centre stage clear for Anderson and the Lancastrian didn’t disappoint, knocking out Mohammad Shami’s middle pole to win the match for England, move past Glenn McGrath onto 564 Test wickets and jump into fourth place on the all-time list,

What they said – Alastair Cook: “Ever since [my England retirement] was announced, I suppose you hope you have a good week. To top it off with a score here is just incredible. Sometimes dreams come true,” Cook told Ian Ward.

“On a purely selfish level, even at the end, fielding at short leg with the Barmy Army singing, it’s why you play sport – occasionally those little selfish moments. It was very special. It’s just been a great week.”

James Anderson: “I’ll go away now – we’ve got a decent break before Sri Lanka – and try to get myself in as decent as condition as possible to cope with the rigours of bowling seam in Sri Lanka, which can be tough.

“Then we’ll just see how it goes. I read something that Glenn McGrath said – he went into the 2006 Ashes with no intention of retiring and then by the end of it, he thought his time was up.

“That could happen to me, who knows? I don’t like looking too far ahead. I don’t think it helps certainly me or the team.”

Watch England take on India at home this summer. The five-Test series starts at Trent Bridge on Wednesday, live on Sky Sports from 10am.

Sourse: skysports.com

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