Gill’s Record-Breaking 269 Becomes Highest Test Score by Indian Captain in England

Bhogle acknowledges Gill’s batting supremacy ‘Beautiful from Shubman Gill’

EDGBASTON – India captain Shubman Gill struck a magnificent maiden Test double-century, setting the tone for a dominant performance on Day 2 of the second Test against England. Gill’s commanding knock of 269 anchored India’s formidable first-innings total of 587 all out.

England, in reply, stumbled early and ended the day at 77-3, trailing by a massive 510 runs.

Stand-in pacer Akash Deep made an immediate impact, dismissing two England batters in consecutive deliveries to reduce the hosts to 13-2. The 28-year-old, playing in place of the rested Jasprit Bumrah—India’s top-ranked Test bowler—proved effective despite a shaky start, conceding 12 runs in his first over, including two boundaries by Zak Crawley.

India’s commanding position leaves England with a steep challenge heading into Day 3.

By contrast, Deep’s second over was a double-wicket maiden that left England faltering at 13-2.

He had Ben Duckett, fresh from a superb 149 in England’s five-wicket win in the first Test at Headingley, edging to third slip where Gill capped an already brilliant day for himself by holding a fine catch.

Next ball Ollie Pope fell for a golden duck when, closing the face of the bat, he nicked Deep to second slip, with KL Rahul clinging on at the second attempt.

Joe Root survived the hat-trick delivery.

But India, made to pay for dropping several catches in the cordon at Headingley, then held another when Mohammed Siraj had Crawley edging to Karun Nair at first slip, with England now 25-3.

Root (18 not out) and Yorkshire team-mate Harry Brook (30 not out) prevented further collapse with an unbroken fourth-wicket stand of 52.

But the day belonged to India, bidding for just their fourth series win in England after triumphs in 1971, 1986 and 2007.

“I worked on a few things before the series as well, that I thought might be important for me going into Test cricket,” Gill, told Sky Sports.

“Looking at the results, they are working for me,” added Gill, who also made 147 at Headingley.

But he was equally delighted by India’s much improved out-cricket.

“Fielding was definitely one of those things we spoke about as a team, and it’s great to see that come off so far,” said Gill.

– Majestic Gill –

Earlier, the 25-year-old Gill, in just his second Test as captain, set a new record for the highest score by an India batsman in a Test in England, surpassing the great Sunil Gavaskar’s 221 at the Oval back in 1979.

Gill also received excellent support from spin-bowling all-rounders Ravindra Jadeja (89) and Washington Sundar (42) in partnerships of 203 and 144 for the sixth and seventh wickets, respectively.

Until he got out, Gill batted in near flawless fashion.

He was especially severe on Shoaib Bashir, cover-driving the off-spinner for four and lofting him for six, with the bowler largely unthreatening against frontline batsmen in a return of 3-167 in 45 overs.

A hooked single off fast bowler Josh Tongue, whose two wickets cost 119 runs, took Gill to 200, with the elated skipper bowing to a capacity crowd in celebration.

England brought on part-time medium-pacer Brook in a desperate bid to ‘buy’ a wicket but Gill responded with three successive fours — the best a straight drive.

But it was occasional off-spinner Root who bowled the recalled Sundar with a delivery that turned and bounced.

Gill’s marathon innings of some eight-and-a-half hours finally ended with a rare false shot when a tired pull off Tongue found Pope at square leg, with India now 574-8.

Several England players shook Gill’s hand after he had faced 387 balls, including 30 fours and three sixes.

India, again sent into bat by England captain Ben Stokes, resumed on 310-5, with Gill 114 not out and Jadeja 41 not out in a stand worth 99 at Wednesday’s close after Yashasvi Jaiswal’s entertaining 87.

Gill’s innings was also, statistically at least, the most secure Test hundred in England since analysts Cricviz began keeping such records in 2006.

On Wednesday, Gill’s false shot percentage was just 3.5 percent. The average when making a hundred in England is 12 percent.

But India, batting in ideal sunny conditions on Thursday, now wanted even more runs from Gill and Jadeja after collapses of 7-41 and 6-31 at Headingley proved costly — and the increasingly ruthless duo got them.

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