India declare at 427/6, Siraj strikes early to dismiss Zak Crawley as England begin massive chase
India continued their commanding performance on Day 4 of the second Test at Edgbaston, Birmingham, declaring their second innings at 427/6 and setting England an improbable target of 608 runs. The day’s highlight was once again India’s Test captain Shubman Gill, who followed up his monumental first-innings 269 with a stunning 161 in the second innings.
England’s response began on a shaky note. Mohammed Siraj gave India an early breakthrough, dismissing Zak Crawley for 11 runs with a delivery that swung away and was caught at backward point. Soon after, India burnt a review on Ben Duckett, misjudging a possible edge. At the end of the day’s play, England were 14/1 in 2.5 overs, still needing 594 runs for an unlikely victory.
Gill’s masterclass continues
Shubman Gill’s second century of the match came in just 129 deliveries, marking his third century in just two Tests as captain. He dominated the English bowling, particularly targeting Joe Root with multiple slog-sweeps for sixes. Gill reached his 150 with a six, but his innings ended abruptly at 161 when a Shoaib Bashir delivery rose sharply and led to a caught-and-bowled dismissal.
Gill also broke two significant records during his innings:
- Surpassed Virat Kohli for the most runs in a debut Test series as Indian captain.
- Became the Indian player with the highest aggregate in a single Test match.
Jadeja’s steady support, Reddy falls again
Ravindra Jadeja played a crucial supporting role, reaching his fifty in 94 balls and ensuring India’s lead kept climbing. Nitish Reddy, however, failed to impress again, dismissed for just one run — identical to his first-innings score.
India added quick runs in the final session, with Gill and Jadeja scoring at a brisk pace to take the lead past 600. The innings was declared at 427/6, putting immense scoreboard pressure on England.
England’s daunting task begins
England started their second innings with Akash Deep and Mohammed Siraj sharing the new ball. Zak Crawley’s early exit and the pressure of chasing a record target already set a tough tone. Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope were at the crease as stumps were drawn.
With two full days of play remaining and a record target to chase, England’s only realistic chance may be to bat out time. For India, every wicket brings them closer to a series win.