Key Points

India squandered a dominant position at Headingley, dropping crucial catches and suffering dramatic batting collapses despite five centuries. England capitalized on the reprieves, with Duckett's aggressive 149 leading a record chase of 371. The tailenders' lack of runs and questionable team selection further hurt India's chances. Ultimately, fielding lapses and missed opportunities overshadowed India's historic batting performance.

Key Points: India's Fielding Collapse Costs Them Headingley Test Despite Five Tons

  • India drop 10 catches including key reprieves for Duckett, Pope, and Brook
  • Five individual centuries go in vain as batting collapses twice
  • Tailenders contribute just 9 runs across both innings
  • England chase 371 with Duckett's fearless 149 leading the charge
4 min read

From dominance to defeat: India's fielding fails, batting collapses in Headingley

India's dropped catches and batting collapses overshadow five centuries as England chase 371 to win the Headingley Test in dramatic fashion.

"Catches win matches—when you spill close to ten, it just might. – Wisden"

Leeds, June 25

Shubman Gill's first day as captain of the Test match had the perfect start. Opting to bat first, India racked up 369/3 by stumps on Day 1, with Gill himself registering his first century outside Asia. Yet, four days later, it ended in bitter disappointment. England chased down 371 in the fourth innings, sealing a five-wicket win, as per Wisden.

India were in command for significant stretches, but couldn't hold their nerve when it mattered most. England, in contrast, stayed patient, seized crucial moments, and walked away with a memorable win.

The old adage says "catches win matches," one dropped chance rarely decides a game but when you spill close to ten, it just might.

Both sides were guilty of lapses in the field at Headingley, a notoriously tricky venue for catching, but India's mistakes proved costlier. Yashasvi Jaiswal was the main offender, putting down at least four catches across both innings, including key chances of Ben Duckett, Ollie Pope, and Harry Brook. Each of them capitalised, Pope added 46 runs after being dropped, Duckett 51 and 52 in his two innings, and Brook 16 in the first after a reprieve.

Other missed opportunities only compounded India's woes. Jadeja dropped one at backward point, Pant fumbled a chance off Brook, and Sai Sudharsan misjudged one too. Add to that a critical no-ball from Bumrah, which cost Brook's wicket when he was on zero, a moment that turned costly as the match tightened.

India made history with the bat, for the wrong reasons. For the first time ever, a team lost a Test despite scoring five individual hundreds. The contributions came from Jaiswal (101), Gill (147), Pant (134 and 118), and KL Rahul (137). It was a landmark achievement, but ultimately in vain.

The centuries laid the foundation, but none of the batters stayed long enough to bat England out of the contest. Once the centurions were dismissed, India collapsed. From 430/3, they folded for 471 in the first innings. In the second, they went from 333/4 to 364 all out. These sudden implosions, starting with Gill's dismissal in the first innings and Pant's in the second, undid much of the good work.

What made things worse was the non-existent contribution from India's tail. The last four batters managed just 9 runs combined across both innings, 1, 0, 3, and 1 in the first, and 4, 0, 0, 0 in the second. England's No. 8-11, by comparison, added a vital 72 runs in their only innings. In a tight Test, that margin proved crucial.

India's team selection also raised eyebrows. Shardul Thakur was included as a fourth seamer and batting option at No.8, but barely featured with the ball. He wasn't brought on until the 40th over in the first innings, and bowled just six overs, conceding over six per over. While he did make a brief impact in the second innings with two quick wickets.

Given his limited use, India might have been better off selecting someone like Nitish Kumar Reddy for batting depth, or Kuldeep Yadav for added spin and control.

Despite all this, India still had the upper hand heading into the final day. A 371-run target on a Day 5 pitch, with rain looming and the run rate hovering around four, seemed more than defendable but England, true to their new identity, didn't just chase, they Bazballed it down.

Ben Duckett led the way with a fearless century (149), including reverse sweeps against the rough to negate Jadeja. Zak Crawley (65) and Joe Root (53*) chipped in with fifties, and debutant Jamie Smith finished the job with flair. Perhaps India could have been more flexible with their tactics, quicker with their field adjustments.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the cricket article:
R
Rahul K.
Heartbreaking loss after such a strong start! 😔 Our batting was brilliant but fielding let us down big time. Yashasvi needs to work on his catching - those dropped chances cost us the match. Still proud of the centuries though! #TeamIndia
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Priya M.
Why does our tail always fail overseas? 9 runs from last 4 batters is unacceptable at this level. England's lower order showed how it's done. Time to groom proper all-rounders instead of bits-and-pieces players like Thakur.
A
Amit S.
The real issue was lack of killer instinct. We had them on the ropes multiple times but let England off the hook. Test matches are won by being ruthless for 5 days, not just 3. Need to learn from Australia's mentality.
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Sneha R.
Shubman Gill showed great promise as captain! His century was class. But our field placements were too defensive on Day 5 - should have attacked more against Bazball. Sometimes you need to fight fire with fire 🔥
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Vikram J.
That no-ball from Bumrah was the turning point! At this level, such basic errors are unforgivable. Still, credit to England - their fearless approach is changing Test cricket. Maybe we need to be less rigid in our thinking.
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Neha P.
So many positives despite the loss - Pant's comeback, Gill's overseas ton, Rahul's consistency. But fielding drills need to be top priority before next match. Can't win Tests dropping 10 catches! 🤦‍♀️ #LearnAndMoveOn

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