Key Points

India's batting lineup has rewritten history with seven 350+ scores in the ongoing Test series against England. Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar's unbeaten 203-run partnership secured a dramatic draw at Old Trafford. The team now holds the record for most 350+ totals in a single Test series, surpassing Australia's previous benchmark. With one Test remaining, India aims to extend their dominance despite trailing 2-1.

Key Points: India Shatters Record with Seven 350+ Scores in England Test Series

  • India surpasses Australia's record with seven 350+ totals in a Test series
  • Jadeja and Sundar's 203-run stand rescues India at Old Trafford
  • Shubman Gill and Yashasvi Jaiswal lead India's batting dominance
  • Series finale at The Oval offers chance to extend record streak
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India's batting brilliance sets new benchmark with record 350+ scores in England series

India's batting dominance sets a new Test cricket record with seven 350+ totals in the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy series against England.

"This team has redefined consistency—seven 350+ scores in a single series is unprecedented. – Cricket Analyst"

Manchester, July 28

India's batting unit has been in red-hot form throughout the ongoing Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, and their consistency has now earned them a place in the record books. With one Test still to play, India have already posted seven scores of 350 or more in the series, the most by any team in a single Test series in the history of the game.

Their latest effort, 425/4 in the second innings of the drawn fourth Test at Old Trafford, was yet another example of their remarkable discipline with the bat. The innings was anchored by a magnificent unbeaten century from Ravindra Jadeja and a maiden Test ton from Washington Sundar, whose unbroken 203-run stand helped India escape with a draw on the final day.

This run of consistent batting performances puts India ahead of some of the most legendary teams in cricket history. Australia had previously held the joint record with six 350-plus totals in three different series at home against England in 1920/21, and away in 1948 and 1989 but India's class of 2025, led by the likes of Shubman Gill, Yashasvi Jaiswal, and Ravindra Jadeja, has now gone one better.

With the series finale set to begin at The Oval from Thursday, India have one final opportunity to extend their dominance with the bat. Though they still trail the series 2-1.

Another highlight of Day 5 was the unbreakable partnership between Jadeja and Washington Sundar. Walking into a pressure situation with India still trailing, the duo showed remarkable grit and composure to put together an unbeaten 203-run stand for the fifth wicket, now the highest fifth-wicket partnership by an Indian pair in England.

Sundar, playing with maturity, brought up his maiden Test hundred and remained unbeaten on 101, matching Jadeja's calmness and stroke-play throughout the session.

Their partnership also marked India's 10th century stand in this series, making it the second-most in a single Test series for India, just behind the 11 century stands recorded against West Indies at home in 1978/79.

Coming to the match, stellar centuries from Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar in the second innings guided India to secure a draw in the fourth test match of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy against England at Old Trafford, Manchester on Sunday.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As a cricket fan living in Manchester, I must say India's batting has been a joy to watch. That Jadeja-Sundar partnership was pure class. Though England still leads, this series has been one for the ages!
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Aditya G
Records are nice but we need to win the series yaar! Our bowlers need to step up in the final Test. Batting has been outstanding but cricket is about all departments. Still proud of the team's fighting spirit!
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Priyanka N
Washington Sundar is proving to be a real find for India! His temperament is amazing for a young player. And Jadeja - what can I say? The man is a legend in making. So happy to see our all-rounders performing so well abroad.
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Michael C
Respect from England! Your batsmen have adapted brilliantly to our conditions. That partnership was proper test match batting - something we could learn from. Looking forward to an exciting finale at The Oval.
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Kavya N
While the batting has been great, I'm slightly worried about our middle order collapses in first innings. We can't always rely on lower order to bail us out. But kudos to the team for showing such fighting spirit! 💪
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Varun X
This is why Test cricket is

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