Broad and Swann rescue England

NOTTINGHAM, England, (Reuters) – Stuart Broad  launched a late counter-attack with a blazing 64 to help England  fight back against India on the first day of the second test yesterday.

India were 24 for one at the close after England had been  bowled out for 221 after tea with rookie opener Abhinav Mukund  out to the first ball of the innings, caught in the gully by  Kevin Pietersen off James Anderson.

Although India finished with the upper hand, England would  feel they had clawed their way back into the game after they  were reduced to 124 for eight at tea. Broad’s innings came from  only 66 balls and he added a crucial 73 with Graeme Swann (28)  for the ninth wicket.

“We had a chat at tea and thought we needed to grab some of  the momentum back,” Broad told reporters. “If there was any  width I was going to throw my hands at the ball. I knew we had  to put the Indian bowlers off their line and lengths.”

Alastair Cook is sent packing by Ishant Sharma.

The Indian pace bowlers shared the wickets evenly as Praveen  Kumar claimed three for 45, Ishant Sharma three for 66 and  Shanthakumaran Sreesanth three for 77. Off-spinner Harbhajan  Singh chipped in with the final wicket when Broad was caught on  the mid-wicket boundary.

Swann left for an X-ray on his left hand late in the day after the delivery which dismissed him popped dangerously off a full length from Kumar. The X-ray showed no significant damage and the off-spinner is expected to bowl today after  another assessment.

Sreesanth preferred to pay tribute to Broad’s daring innings  than express any disappoitment that India had let the match  slip.
“That’s how it goes, all credit to him,” Sreesanth said. “He  came after us and he took his chances, he played well. It’s good  that he came out fighting. It should be a good game.”

The day was one big struggle for batsmen as the ball swung  consistently in overcast conditions. England lost Alastair Cook  (2) and Jonathan Trott (4) early to make it 23 for two.

Cook was lbw to Sharma, although television replays  suggested the ball may have gone over the stumps, while Trott  was caught at second slip in Sreesanth’s first over.

Captain Andrew Strauss and Pietersen took the score to 73  for two. From there, wickets fell quickly and no batsman ever  looked settled until Broad and Swann came out with their  carefree game-plan.
Pietersen (29) fell to the fifth ball after lunch, edging  Sreesanth to Suresh Raina at third slip, playing at an  out-swinger that he could perhaps have left. A white curtain  that formed part of a sightscreen had fallen and may have  distracted him.

KUMAR FINED

The batsman had earlier survived one close lbw appeal and at  the end of the over an angry Kumar remonstrated with umpire  Marais Erasmus. He had to be dragged away by team mate Harbhajan  Singh and the International Cricket Council announced later that  he had been fined 20 percent of his match fee because of the  incident.

Strauss batted patiently for 32 in 165 minutes but he lost  patience and was drawn into a full-blooded drive when the  probing medium-paced Kumar bowled a rare wide delivery and Raina  held a sharp head-high catch at third slip.

The score slumped from 85 for three to 85 for five when Eoin  Morgan was dismissed without scoring off his third ball. He was  lbw as Kumar moved the ball from leg to middle and off. It was  88 for six when Matt Prior (1) edged another accurate ball on  off stump to Dravid at first slip.  Tim Bresnan, playing in place of the injured Chris Tremlett,  showed brief resistance before he also edged to Dravid for 11.  Ian Bell was the eighth man out, but his dismissal was more out  of self-indiscipline than good bowling as he edged an attempted  square cut to the wicketkeeper off Sharma.

Bell had been fortunate to survive earlier, when he edged  Kumar to Dravid but the ball spilled out of the first slip’s  hands as he fell.
“It has been a good exciting day’s cricket,” Broad added. “I  always think these days are better than 300 for one or two.  India won three quarters of the day but we have changed the  momentum a little.“It’s now down to the bowlers and we’re all excited about  what can happen in the morning. It will still swing whether the  sun is out or not, it’s not like Lord’s.” England, who lead the four-match encounter 1-0 after winning  the first test at Lord’s, are seeking a sixth straight series  victory.

 

Scoreboard
England first innings
A. Strauss c Raina b Kumar                   32
A. Cook lba b Sharma                                 2
J. Trott c Laxman b Sreesanth               4
K. Pietersen c Raina b Sreesanth         29
I. Bell c Dhoni b Sharma                        31
E. Morgan lbw b Kumar                           0
M. Prior c Dravid b Sreesanth                1
T. Bresnan c Dravid b Sharma            11
S. Broad c Tendulkar c Harbhajan    64
G. Swann c Mukund b Kumar             28
J. Anderson not out                                  6
Extras (b-2 lb-8 w-3)                             13
Total (all out, 68.4 overs)                 221   
Fall of wickets: 1-7 2-23 3-73 4-85 5-85 6-88 7-117 8-124  9-197 10-221
Bowling: Kumar 22-8-45-3 (1w), Sharma 22-4-66-3 (2w)  Sreesanth 19-1-77-3, Harbhajan 4.4-0-22-1, Yuvraj 1-0-1-0

India first innings
A. Mukund c Pietersen b Anderson   0
R. Dravid not out                                   7
VVS Laxman not out                          13
Extras (lb-2 w-1 nb-1)                          4
Total (for one wicket, 15 overs)      24   
To bat: S.Tendulkar, S. Raina, Yuvraj Singh, MS Dhoni,  Harbhajan Singh, P. Kumar, S. Sreesanth, I.Sharma.
Fall of wickets: 1-0
Bowling: Anderson 5-2-10-1, Broad 7-3-5-0 (1w), Bresnan  3-0-7-0 (1nb).