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England and India ready for cliffhanger on final day in dramatic fifth Test | England v India 2025

First came bad light, then a burst of rain, and with it the penultimate day of this epic Test series ended with the ultimate cliffhanger overnight.

England had seemingly been cruising to their target of 374 and a 3‑1 series victory, driven by sparkling centuries from Harry Brook and Joe Root. But India roared back after tea to leave the hosts six wickets down, still 35 runs short, when the players and umpires walked off to a chorus of jeers.

So despite looking like a memorable fourth day would bring ­finality to the contest, the deciding fifth Test now heads into a fifth day with ­every­thing still on the line. England will resume in the morning hoping that Jamie Smith, last of the top seven, guides them home after a night’s rest and Chris Woakes, his dislocated left shoulder still in a sling, is not required to bat.

India can still level the series at 2-2 – a share of the Anderson‑Tendulkar Trophy – and, having ­floundered slightly during a 195-run fifth‑wicket stand between Brook and Root, they had perhaps cause to feel most aggrieved when proceedings were paused at 5.30pm. The force was very much with the tourists at this stage; England were scrapping for their lives.

Brook’s thrilling 10th Test century had been terminated on 111 from 98 balls before tea – bat flying out of his hand when top-edging Akash Deep into the ring – while Jacob Bethell lost his middle stump for five trying to break free from the shackles. But it was Root’s removal for 105 to an edge off Prasidh Krishna that truly set alarm bells ringing among the home support.

It had been coming, in fairness, with the old ball belatedly ­starting to move for India’s quicks and ­forcing a succession of lbw appeals.

From 337 for six, Smith and Jamie Overton continued the theme, ­playing out 20 balls of paralysis in which they either beat the bat or squirted off the inside edge. Just two singles were added and both were cheered like ­boundaries.

Most galling of all was that 30 minutes after play was called off at 6pm, the Oval was drenched in sunshine and the last remaining ­spectators were shouting words like “disgrace”. If nothing else, the overnight pause handed Smith and the tail time to reset, even if this also meant they would be facing a refreshed Indian attack with the second new ball just 3.4 overs away.

Harry Brook (left) and Joe Root shared a 195-run fifth-wicket stand at the Kia Oval. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

While the verbals that have been traded regularly during this series died down after a chirpy start, the battle out in the middle was no less intense, and not least during India’s late surge. Krishna and ­Mohammed Siraj whipped up the Tamasha, with the latter somehow still hitting 87mph on the speed gun in his fifth successive Test. What a cricketer.

Up to that point it had chiefly been about the audacity of Brook, plus the 39th entry into Root’s catalogue of Test centuries. Hitting 14 fours and two sixes overall – one of which we will get to – Brook initially burst out of the traps.

But he then smartly started to roll his wrists on his pull shots when Shubman Gill spread the field to all corners. Control, precision and typical brute strength placed this 91-ball century among his very best.

Root, by contrast, was scratchy at first and fortunate to survive a tight lbw shout from Krishna on three in which he was saved by umpire’s call. Soon enough, though, he was in his groove, smiling at his opponents after some rare snarl on day two and caressing 12 gorgeous fours. Since Bazball began in 2022, the 34‑year‑old averages a remarkable 82 in the fourth innings.

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There was little doubt as to the moment that changed the day though; a moment that Siraj, much like Trent Boult after the 2019 World Cup final, will replay in his mind over and again should India go on to lose. In a sport that has disappointment baked into it, holding a catch in the deep but carrying the ball over the boundary for six must rank among the worst feelings.

Brook was on 19 at the time, ­England 137 for three, when he hooked Krishna from outside off and sent a high catch to long leg. Siraj ­snaffled it but planted his heel on the rope simultaneously, before ­stumbling over completely in full knowledge of the error. A ­number of India’s ­players were already ­celebrating, only to spot Siraj with his head in his hands.

India had enjoyed a positive start to the day too, even if there were signs of the pitch having lost some of its seam movement. The ­dangerous Ben Duckett had edged a smart full ball from Krishna behind on 54, while Ollie Pope fell lbw for 27 to a ball that nipped back from Siraj. It ­completed what has become his standard one century, 30-something average series for Pope.

Brook’s reprieve changed the mood of a morning in which ­England reached lunch on 164 for three, before he and Root then dominated the afternoon.

Expect the fired up and indefatigable Siraj to come charging in on Monday morning, desperate to ensure his footfault becomes a mere footnote.

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