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Images: Cook, Morgan feast on weary India

Last updated on: August 13, 2011 00:24 IST
Eoin Morgan congratulates Alastair Cook on his double century

Alastair Cook hit a career-best 294 as a ruthless England buried India under a massive 486-run lead to leave the visitors with a daunting task of saving the third Test and their number one ranking at Edgbaston on Friday.

- Scorecard / Match Report

The 26-year-old Cook anchored the innings brilliantly as he batted for close to two days before the hosts declared their first innings at an imposing 710 for seven at the fag end of the third day.

In reply, India lost Virender Sehwag yet again for a first ball duck to be struggling at 35 for one, still trailing by 451 runs to avoid an innings defeat.

Gautam Gambhir (14) and Rahul Dravid (18) were at the crease when stumps were drawn for the day.

With two days left in the match, Indians will have to bat out of their skin to save the Test on an Edgbaston track which is expected to deteriorate on the last day.

A defeat for India will not only seal the series-win for England the series but also the tag of the number one Test team in the world.

Sehwag registers a King Pair

Last updated on: August 13, 2011 00:24 IST
Virender Sehwag walks back to the pavillion after being dismissed

The highlight of the day was Cook's splendid batting as the left-hander batted for 767 minutes and grinded the Indian attack down for 545 balls, hitting 33 fours.

Leg-spinner Amit Mishra was the most successful bowler for India with three wickets but he gave away 150 runs.

Indians had the worst-start possible to their second innings when opener Sehwag fell to the first ball he faced caught at first slip off James Anderson as he tried to reach out to an outswinger.

Sehwag had been dismissed off the first ball in the first innings also and it gave the Delhi dasher a completely avoidable pair of golden ducks.

Gambhir too suffered an anxious moment when a Tim Bresnan ripper rose from a length and hit the batsman on his right fingers even as he took an instinctive, evasive action.

Gambhir had another close call when off-spinner Graeme Swann went up for a loud leg-before-wicket appeal but umpire Steve Davis negative it.

Gambhir and Dravid though avoided any further calamity for the hosts.

Sensational Cook

Last updated on: August 13, 2011 00:24 IST
Alastair Cook celebrates after scoring a double ton

Cook shared a 222-run fourth wicket stand with another left-hander, Eoin Morgan (104) who registered the second Test century of his yet nascent Test career.

Morgan's knock spanned 247 minutes and contained 11 fours from 199 balls.

When Cook reached 286, he overtook Peter May's 285 against the West Indies in 1957 as the highest total achieved at this ground.

Quick wickets check England's progress

Last updated on: August 13, 2011 00:24 IST
Amit Mishra celebrates after picking up Matt Prior's wicket

India did manage to claim three wickets off 32 balls in a stretch of play in the afternoon before Cook found yet another able ally in Tim Bresnan (53) as 97 runs were put for the seventh wicket.

England lost four wickets during the day's play -- Morgan,  Ravi Bopara (7), Matt Prior (5) and Cook himself as they added 254 runs from 73 overs of batting.

Praveen Kumar took two for 98 from his 40 spirited overs. The day had interruptions galore, twice rain ate 47 minutes from the opening session of two hours and later bad light twice held up the game once even when the floodlights were on.

Power failure stops play briefly

Last updated on: August 13, 2011 00:24 IST
Indian players walk back to the pavillion after bad light stopped play

Bad light stopped play for around 20 minutes during the post-lunch session.

The sky turned a little dark but the available light does not seem to be too bad and play could have continued with floodlights on.

But unfortunately, there was a power outage at the ground and floodlights were not working.

Former India captain and now commentator Sourav Ganguly took the opportunity to remark that power cuts happen in London too and not just in Kolkata.

"I remember lights going off at Eden Gardens a couple of times during the IPL recently. It's happening in London also," he was heard as saying at the commentators' box.

Play resumed after around 20 minutes with slight improvement in availability of light on the ground but still no floodlights working.

Morgan back amongst runs

Last updated on: August 13, 2011 00:24 IST
Eoin Morgan celebrates after scoring a century

England, who resumed at their overnight score of 456 for 3, never really pressed on the pedal and generally milked the Indian bowling for the total they desired.

In the 73 overs that England batted, Cook hit only seven fours while Morgan, generally a hard-hitting batsman, didn't hit more than five boundaries.

In a start-and-stop kind of day, Tim Bresnan alone brought some urgency to the proceedings and made 53 from 75 balls inclusive of six fours and a six.

Morgan departed when he drove Raina uppishly into the covers. The left-hander batted for 237 minutes and hit 11 fours from 199 balls faced.

Indians would have been concerned by the sharp turn which Raina managed none worse than a delivery which once turned square and jumped over wicketkeeper Dhoni's left shoulder to go for four byes.