Winning it in singles, India’s gen next shows they too can

Fourth innings chases in India usually come with disclaimers. Pitches can be reduced to dust bowls, spinners can turn the ball square, close-in fielders start swarming in your face and the chirping can get irritatingly loud.

Random scary numbers are thrown at you. Like this: Not once in the last 10 years have India scored 150+ in the fourth innings to win a home Test. You would still think rationality won’t go for a toss even when the target is 192, 10 runs less than what India were dismissed for in Hyderabad and their lowest score in seven innings of this series. But it did.

It’s all in the mind, really. This wasn’t as bad a pitch as it was made out to be. The groundwork laid out diligently the previous evening, all India needed was to build on it.

Rohit Sharma was leader like, taking as much strike as possible, spooking England with a few ODI-like shots while constantly imploring Yashasvi Jaiswal to bat out a few balls before going after a bowler. He didn’t, trying to go over extra cover against Joe Root but getting a leading edge instead.

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