India ‘won the day’ and probably the Mohali Test as England face huge task to save match

Ravichandran Ashwin’s fine all-round performance put India firmly in control of the third Test on Monday.

Ravichandran Ashwin, left, again India's dangerman, claiming three of four England wickets on Day 3 in Mohali. Adnan Abidi / Reuters
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Ravichandran Ashwin’s fine all-round performance put India firmly in control of the third Test on Monday, as he followed up a dominant innings of 72 with three wickets to leave England reeling on 78 for four.

The visitors, who conceded a 134-run first-innings lead, trailed their hosts by 56 runs with six second-innings wickets remaining at stumps on Day 3 in Mohali.

Joe Root (36) and nightwatchman Gareth Batty (0) were at the crease.

Root opened with Alastair Cook in the absence of teenager Haseeb Hameed with a hand injury. He will bat later in the innings but could miss the rest of the series, depending on what X-rays reveal.

Ashwin drew first blood by getting Cook bowled for 12.

The England captain had been living dangerously, with two lbw calls against him going for reviews, first by India and then by the batsman himself, but he survived only to see his stumps shattered later on.

Ashwin kept up the pressure from his end as he bamboozled Moeen Ali (5) with a flighted delivery, causing the batsman to give away a catch to mid-on.

More from India v England:

• Day 2: Mohali Test goes from evenly-contested to advantage India courtesy of an Ashwin half-century

• Day 1: England top order collapse hands India advantage on Day 1 of Mohali Test

• Dileep Premachandran: India finally boast a well-rounded attack — and England are feeling the full force

Root sought to steady the innings with Jonny Bairstow, but the wicketkeeper-batsman’s resistance did not last long.

Off-spinner Jayant Yadav got Bairstow, who top-scored with a dogged 89 in England’s first innings of 283, caught behind for 15.

An unrelenting Ashwin, the world’s top-ranked Test bowler, then trapped Ben Stokes lbw for five as the visitors slipped further.

“We’ve lost a few wickets this evening, which was not ideal, that was not the plan,” Bairstow said.

“However, we still got Root out there in the middle, we’ve still got Jos (Buttler) to come, we still got Woakesy (Chris Woakes) to come and (Adil) Rashid scored a heck of a lot of runs. There’s still a lot of batting within the shed.”

Earlier India’s first innings saw five half-centuries before the hosts, who resumed the day on 271 for six, were bowled out for 417 in the afternoon.

“They have won today. I think up until this morning, it was evenly poised ... they played well this morning. Give them credit,” Bairstow said.

Ravindra Jadeja top-scored with 90 while Jayant Yadav’s 55 — his first fifty in only his second Test — gave the England bowlers a frustrating two sessions of play.

Seam bowler Stokes claimed his third Test five-wicket haul while leg-spinner Rashid took four wickets.

Jadeja, who registered his career-best Test score surpassing his 68 at Lord’s in 2014, fell 10 runs short of his first Test ton. But his 80-run stand with Jayant Yadav underpinned India’s impressive lower-order performance.

The left-handed Jadeja, who started the day on 31, took over responsibility for piloting the innings after the fall of his overnight partner Ashwin.

Ashwin’s wicket ended a 97-run seventh-wicket stand between him and Jadeja. The pair had lifted India after the loss of four wickets in the final session on Sunday.

“Any team will have a plus point if its lower-middle order is contributing. If the last 7-11 (batsmen) can give 50 to 100 runs extra for the team it’s a bonus,” said Jadeja.

Captain Virat Kohli (62) and Cheteshwar Pujara (51) also contributed half-centuries.

India lead the five-match series 1-0 with one game drawn.

* Agence France-Presse

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