James Anderson is 38 but runs in with the intensity and hunger of someone who is 22. And he is a sorcerer with the ball.
On a sluggish pitch, he sent the off-stump cartwheeling on two occasions, operating with exceptional craft.
Deadly over
Anderson’s twin strikes in an over, bamboozling the smooth-stroking Shubman Gill — he drove with timing and grace for his 50 — and a newly arrived Ajinkya Rahane, sent India hurtling towards a rare home defeat in the first Test at the M.A. Chidambaram Stadium here on Tuesday.
Anderson is a wizard with the ball. After he reverse-swung two deliveries with extreme precision to fire the ball between the bat and pad of Gill and Rahane, he sent down an off-cutter to find the leading edge of the in-form Rishabh Pant.
His three-wicket burst in the morning settled the issue as England outplayed India, dismissed for 192, by 227 runs to take a 1-0 lead in the four-Test series. Skipper Kohli’s high-class 72 went in vain.
Even as Anderson tormented India, the admirable Jack Leach’s left-arm spin gave the host little respite. He was getting the ball to spin away sharply from the right-hander and the deliveries were laced with bounce.
Like his spin partner Dom Bess, Leach is technically sound. He pivots well, possesses an ideal hip-drive, imparts revs on the ball and has an easy, natural release.
Leach spun one away from Cheteshwar Pujara in the morning to have the tenacious batsman picked up at slip. It was a major strike.
On a wearing fifth-day pitch, Leach was always a threat even if the inconsistent Bess had an off-day. But then, Bess got Washington Sundar to nick a delivery that spun past the southpaw.
Washington erred in not stretching fully forward to make use of his height and kill the spin. Bess’ appeal was negated and even as the third umpire took his time to come up with a verdict, Washington ‘walked.’
Kohli in his element
As wickets fell around him, Kohli batted with skill and application. His bat appeared as broad as his heart, as he struck Bess for three successive fours, between long-on and deep mid-wicket.
A straight drive off Archer was a top shot. So was a scorching cover-drive off Stokes, Kohli’s weight was beautifully distributed as he executed the stroke. And Leach was timed between the bowler and the non-striker.
He is such an organised batsman, with ideal footwork, both in offence and defence. Before he was consumed by a Stokes delivery that kept low on this uneven fifth-day pitch, Kohli had made a statement.
Extra bounce
Leach got one to bounce extra to snare Ashwin on the cut, and after Kohli’s dismissal, it was only a matter of time.
Incredibly, this is England’s sixth straight away Test victory. India now needs to win at least two of the remaining Tests and draw one to make the World Test Championship final.
This will take some doing.
Scorecard
England (Ist inngs): 578.
India (Ist inngs): 337.
England (IInd inngs): 178.
India (IInd innings): Rohit Sharma b Leach 12 (20b, 1x4, 1x6), Shubman Gill b Anderson 50 (83b, 7x4, 1x6), Cheteshwar Pujara c Stokes b Leach 15 (38b, 1x4), Virat Kohli b Stokes 72 (104b, 9x4), Ajinkya Rahane b Anderson 0 (3b), Rishabh Pant c Root b Anderson 11 (19b, 2x4), Washington Sundar c Buttler b Bess 0 (5b), R. Ashwin c Buttler b Leach 9 (46b, 1x4), Shahbaz Nadeem c Burns b Leach 0 (13b), Ishant Sharma (not out) 5 (15b, 1x4), Jasprit Bumrah c Buttler b Archer 4 (4b, 1x4), Extras (b-8, lb-5, nb-1) 14 Total (all out in 58.1 overs) 192.
Fall of wkt: 1-25 (Rohit, 5.3), 2-58 (Pujara, 19.3), 3-92 (Gill, 26.2), 4-92 (Rahane, 26.5), 5-110 (Pant, 32.3), 6-117 (Washington, 33.5), 7-171 (Ashwin, 51.2), 8-179 (Kohli, 54.3), 9-179 (Nadeem, 55.3).
England bowling: Archer 9.4-1-23-1, Leach 26-4-76-4, Anderson 11-4-17-3, Bess 8-0-50-1, Stokes 4-1-13-1.
England won by 227 runs.
Man of the Match: Joe Root.