'What a miss!' - Dawson drops sitter at fine leg to give Jaiswal reprieve
Chief Cricket Reporter at The Kia Oval
Fifth Rothesay Test, The Kia Oval (day two of five)
India 224 (Nair 57, Atkinson 5-33, Tongue 3-57) & 75-2 (Jaiswal 51*)
England 247 (Crawley 64, Brook 53, Duckett 43; Krishna 4-62, Siraj 4-86)
India lead by 52 runs
England dropped crucial catches late on the second day of the decisive final Test to leave India with the momentum at The Oval.
Opener Yashasvi Jaiswal was put down twice in his 51 not out and Sai Sudharsan let off once before falling lbw to Gus Atkinson. The tourists eventually closed a chaotic day on 75-2, leading by 52.
The ball darted around throughout. India lost their last four first-innings wickets inside the first six overs of the morning to be bowled out for 224, then England lost all nine of their wickets for 155 runs in being dismissed for 247.
In such helpful conditions for the bowlers, an extraordinary opening stand of 92 between Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett, racked up in less than 13 overs, was incredibly valuable for the home side.
Duckett was sensational for his 43, reverse-sweeping Akash Deep and scooping Mohammed Siraj for a six apiece. Crawley hammered 14 fours in his 64.
Duckett's dismissal, attempting another reverse at Deep, began India's resurgence and sparked more exchanges between the two teams in what has been a tetchy series.
Deep put his arm around the shoulders of Duckett as he departed. If that looked good-natured, later verbals between Prasidh Krishna and Joe Root were anything but. Root, usually unflappable, was furious.
Mohammed Siraj was outstanding in taking 4-86, supported by Krishna's 4-62. Harry Brook's 53 dragged England into a slender lead of 23.
That advantage was wiped out quickly as England bowled for a second time in the day. Whereas the hosts were ruthless in the morning, led by Atkinson's 5-33, their sloppiness in the evening could cost them a series victory.
Sudharsan was put down by Crawley after Jaiswal was given lives by Brook and Liam Dawson. Dawson was subbing for Chris Woakes, who will miss the remainder of the match with a shoulder injury sustained on day one.
England left with huge battle to win series
'Not often you see Root lose his temper' - tensions begin to simmer on day two
England were denied a series win by India's rearguard in the fourth Test at Old Trafford. They now need a huge effort on Saturday at The Oval to prevent a 2-2 draw.
They could and probably should have been out of sight. The Duckett-Crawley partnership frazzled India, threatening to completely derail the tourists. The wisdom of the shot Duckett played for his dismissal can be debated, though it was only in keeping with the rest of a sparkling innings.
India deserve huge credit for the way they fought back. They left themselves a seamer short in their selection, still Siraj, Deep and Krishna have collectively outbowled England.
As he usually does when Jasprit Bumrah is not in the team, Siraj stepped up to lead the attack. A tireless eight-over spell across the afternoon that had all of Ollie Pope, Root and Jacob Bethell lbw was a game-changing contribution.
England were poor with the ball on Thursday, yet picked up wickets. Their bowlers improved on Friday and were let down the by the fielders.
At the end of it all, India were left with the opportunity to bat themselves towards victory on Saturday.
England live and die by the sword
Crawley hit 14 boundaries before being caught for 64
The harder the batting conditions, the more likely England are to attack. For that reason, the Duckett-Crawley stand was the most extreme period of Bazballing this summer, yet the aggressive intent also caused England problems.
The opening partnership seemed a different game to the rest of the day. Duckett danced down the pitch and played the audacious shots over his shoulder. Crawley jumped on to the front foot with authoritative drives.
Duckett's attempted reverse at Deep was one too many, opening the door for India. Krishna got Crawley to miscue a pull before the bowler's confrontation with Root caused the umpires to step in.
As Siraj ran through the middle-order, including Bethell out for six in his first home Test innings, Krishna followed by making short work of the lower-order. Jamie Smith's lazy poke to slip, Jamie Overton's four-ball duck and Atkinson's miscue to mid-on were all tame dismissals.
England needed Brook, who began in frantic fashion, to hold them together. Slashing and swiping, he had just nine from the first 19 balls he faced, then accelerated to a half-century from 57. When Tongue arrived, Brook played an incredible sweep for six off Siraj.
Either side of an hour's delay for rain, Brook tried to protect Tongue from the strike, though could not prevent himself being bowled by the irrepressible Siraj.