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HYDERABAD, India, Jan 28, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Debutant spinner Tom Hartley
took seven wickets as England pulled off a dramatic 28-run upset win over
India marked by a stellar batting performance by Ollie Pope in the opening
Test on Sunday.
"Since I've taken the captaincy on... it's 100 percent our greatest victory,"
England skipper Ben Stokes said.
Chasing 231 for victory, India were bowled out for 202 in the final over of
an extended third session of play on the fourth day in Hyderabad, as Hartley
got Mohammed Siraj stumped with his left-arm spin to trigger celebrations
from the England camp.
Pope stood out with his 196 to bring England bouncing back from being 190
behind at the start of their second innings to lead the five-match series 1-
0.
"To come here to India, toughest place as a batter and put in a winning
performance, it's head and shoulders above the rest," Pope said after being
named man of the match in his comeback Test, after suffering a shoulder
injury last year.
Hartley, who got his five-wicket haul after he bowled wicketkeeper-batsman
K.S. Bharat, returned innings figures of 7-62 and had a match tally of nine
wickets.
"It's unbelievable," Hartley said after the match, adding that the win was
"not going to sink in" for some time.
"I'm over the moon."
India came into the high-profile encounter as favourites on home soil, with
an unbeaten Test series record since 2012, when Alastair Cook's England beat
them 2-1.
Indian skipper Rohit Sharma said it was "hard to pinpoint where it went
wrong", and congratulated England for "exceptional" batting.
"You've got to take your hat off, and say 'well played' to Pope," he said.
- 'Bazball' rolls on -
India started well in their chase, before Hartley struck twice in one over to
send back Yashasvi Jaiswal (15) and Shubman Gill (0) in the space of three
deliveries.
Rohit looked good in his knock of 39, but got rapped on the pads by Hartley's
darting ball into the right-hander and walked back after his failed review on
the lbw.
The left-handed Axar Patel (17) was promoted up the order and began attacking
the bowling but was dismissed after the tea break and India soon slipped to
119-7.
Premier spinner Jack Leach took the field with an injured knee, after he
banged it earlier in the match, and bowled 10 overs at a miserly economy rate
for the wicket of Shreyas Iyer.
Bharat and Ravichandran Ashwin attempted to pull things back in their
partnership of 57 but Hartley got them out to end India's hopes.
Rohit's team posted 436 in their first innings in response to 246 by England
and had the tourists in trouble at 163-5 on day three, when Pope played an
innings for the ages and struck his fifth Test ton.
Pope, who blunted the spinners with sweeps and reverse sweeps, resumed the
day on 148.
He was dropped twice on 110 and 184 but his key partnerships with overnight
partner Rehan Ahmed (28) and Hartley (34) after a 112-run stand with Ben
Foakes (34) on Saturday proved decisive.
He finally went for an audacious reverse scoop in his attempt to get his
double ton when England were nine down, but Jasprit Bumrah's ball rattled the
stumps and lunch was called.
Stokes played his part with a 70 in England's first innings after they
elected to bat and stuck to their "Bazball" guns.
A highly aggressive style of play, "Bazball" is a strategy devised by England
coach Brendon McCullum, who goes by the nickname "Baz", and Stokes.
It was the 14th win in 19 Tests for the Stokes-McCullum combination.