The Bazball evangelist Bairstow was launching England back into the game when Indians led by the indefatigable Bumrah stormed back through their skill and relentlessness.
The numbers would lie, as they often do. The raw digits convey that India’s bowlers let England fightback from 83 for 5 and then 149 for 6 to post 284 runs. A classic England stung-by-the-lower-order tour story. Just change the names and dates. A once-typical losing the steam at the end narrative.
Except that it was not. Instead, it was one of India’s finest bowling recoveries in recent times. They did let England off the hook, but they regathered to pull the hook back. Bazball-indoctrinated Jonny Bairstow could have blown them away, but they clutched at the straws, hung onto the swaying pole and then whipped up a furious storm of their own post lunch, counterpunching the counterpunch.
The Bairstow carnage wracked them in the second hour of the first session. After a rip-roaring first hour, wherein Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami tangoed to produce an orchestra of high-class, hostile seam bowling, but woefully luckless as Ben Stokes and Bairstow survived numerous close shaves. Cut into half, edges beaten, edges falling short, tricking fielders, the pair survived by slim margins, leaving frustrated palms on face, imploring gazes skywards and angry kicks onto grass.
Around this point, with Bairstow on 13 of 60 balls, Virat Kohli’s mouth began to itch. Verbals were exchanged, Bairstow mimed the verbal-yapping, Kohli gestured he should just bat and was told to go to his fielding position. It could well have worked in India’s favour as Bairstow suddenly went for two extravagant hoicks – just about cleared the infield with first and missed the second. Kohli guffawed as a taunt. But the jailbreak was done.
Then India unravelled, as Bairstow tucked and tore into, unfurling strokes of rare timing and power. Pulls, late-cuts, lofted drives, every stroke seemed like a slap on the face on India’s vaunted pace-pack. It is on third day afternoons that pitches are most amenable to bat in England. A long and gloomy day lingered for Bumrah and Co.
But as so often they had demonstrated, India’s bowlers find wherewithal when there is none to be found. At Oval last year, there seemed nothing in their tank, nothing they could harness from the pitch, before Bumrah did Bumrah things, that is breathe life into a dead match. Not just Bumrah, India have a slew of bowlers who could conjure magical moments, bowlers that are not just lethal, but relentless.
The post-lunch session started in much the same fashion—Bairstow searing to his third Test hundred on the spin with a punch off Shardul Thakur. That was perhaps the last of Bairstow’s glory shots. That was the exact moment the game was to change. The Bairstow hundred, his manic celebrations, and the over-joyous fist-pumps in the English balcony hurt India so much that it awakened them. The moment felt like India flicking a switch.
So often the comeback arc begins with Bumrah. And so it did. In the new over to Sam Billings, the old Bumrah was back. He rediscovered the in-between lengths again, the inscrutable line again, the precision and penetration again. Billings had to shelve his attacking vigour, he had to jam his bat right in time to prevent a yorker crashing onto his stumps.
The Baz-ball messiah dislodged, Bumrah replaced Jadeja with Siraj, the least tired of the trifecta. His short-ball had Stuart Broad hacking recklessly, Billings looked to spread Bairstow’s gospel but ended up chopping a wobble ball onto the stumps. Siraj added a fourth wicket to return with figures of 66/4. But it was a day the figures hid more than what it revealed. A day they counterpunched the counterpunchers and knocked them out of the floor.
Source:indianexpress.com