As it happened – India vs England, 3rd Test, Ahmedabad, 1st day

Updates, analysis and colour from the first day of the third Test

Andrew Miller24-Feb-2021*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates. All times are local

Stumps: India 99 for 3 (Rohit 57*, Rahane 1*) trail England 112 (Crawley 53, Patel 6-38) by 13 runs

That will be stumps after an eventful close to an eventful day with England finally getting a much-needed breakthrough after being denied on three earlier occasions, no less.First, Rohit top-edged Leach, and Pope, leaping high to his right from short leg, couldn’t quite hold on with his outstretched left hand to what would have been a breath-taking catch. A short time later, Kohli, on 24, sent an Anderson delivery straight to gully, where Pope got his hands to it and put down a straightforward chance. As the claret spurted from Pope’s split right index finger, it was fair to say blood was spilled, pride was hurt and England’s task became ever tougher. England then appealed for the stumping of Rohit after some swift work by Foakes off the bowling of Leach. It was tight, but the batsman was given not out.Leach finally had Kohli out, chopping onto his stumps for 27 with just two minutes left to play on this opening day. With that, India ended the night just 13 runs in arrears with plenty of first-innings wickets in hand.Rohit Sharma whips one away•BCCI

Another first-day fifty for Rohit

Very different conditions, a very similar upshot. Rohit Sharma brings up his fifty from 63 balls with a flick through midwicket off Ben Stokes, as India march ever closer to first-innings parity. He’s been made to work more visibly than was the case in his remarkably transcendent century at Chennai, particularly while Anderson and Broad were in partnership, but there’s no slowing him down when the opportunities arise – as they have done with mounting frequency now that the lacquer has gone off the ball. England are still grumbling about the footmarks – they are forming deep craters in the landing zone now – but they could and should still have been India’s problem had their batting endured for longer than 50 overs. Not a lot the umpires are going to do about that.

Archer and Leach make the incisions

It took him 27 balls in the end to get off the mark, and it seemed he’d done the hard work to bed into a long and fruitful innings. But in the end, Jofra Archer’s extra pace lured Shubman Gill into an awkward flapped pull at a bouncer outside his eye-line, and Zak Crawley trotted in from square leg to complete a simple steepling catch – or as simple as such things get out of the night sky.And then, one over later, Jack Leach emulated Axar Patel and found the same means of extracting even Indian batsmen well used to such conditions. Round the wicket to Cheteshwar Pujara, who poked forward and played for the spin, only to be clobbered on the pads by the one that skidded on through. No review, and suddenly one had brought two. England aren’t out of their hole, but at least they’ve found a stepladder.