One-off Test in Bristol …
Shafali Verma (96) missed out on what could have been a superb century on Test debut. (Twitter/ @ICC
Shafali Verma (96) missed out on what could have been a superb century on Test debut. (Twitter/ @ICC

India suffer dramatic late collapse after superb 96 from Verma

INDIA suffered a dramatic late collapse as England fought back after an audacious 96 from teenage debutant Shafali Verma lit up the second day of the one-off Test in Bristol.
The tourists had been cruising at 167-0 before Verma was caught chasing the boundary that would have brought her a century.
From then, India folded, losing 5-16 to end the day on 187-5, trailing the hosts by 209 runs.
England had earlier declared on 396-9, led by an unbeaten 74 from Sophia Dunkley.
Verma, 17, hit 13 fours and two sixes as she produced the highest score by an Indian woman on Test debut to frustrate England’s bowlers.
She and fellow opener Smriti Mandhana, who made a classy 76, looked to have batted England out of contention but after Verma had hoisted Kate Cross to mid-on, the match swung in the hosts’ favour. India looked scrambled, with England skipper Heather Knight taking 2-1 off six overs to put her team in prime position in this Test which has two days left to run.

Momentum shifts after Shafali show
Despite having never played a Test together – Verma was just 10 when India last played a red-ball match – the India openers combined gloriously in Bristol.
Verma, the top-ranked T20 batter in the world, played the way she knows how: hard. A seaming delivery from Nat Sciver was flayed effortlessly for six, while premier bowler Katherine Brunt saw a full delivery clattered back over her head. Accompanied by Mandhana, a classical player with a stunning cover drive, she flayed England’s attack around the ground. Verma celebrated her half-century with an abashed wave of the bat, preferring to let her shot-making tell the story. Her only emotion came when she toe-ended Cross to mid-on, with the opener throwing back her head in anguish as she left. “This partnership could be huge for women’s cricket in India,” said former India seamer Snehal Pradhan on Test Match Special.
“I’ve already seen a lot of people on my social media who don’t normally talk about women’s cricket, calling for others to turn on the television to watch these two wonderful players.”
England were visibly lifted by Verma’s dismissal. Mandhana began to struggle to rotate the strike before lofting Sciver to mid-off, Shikha Pandey chipped a catch back to Knight while captain Mithali Raj was pinned lbw on review by Sophie Ecclestone. The fielders crowded around the bat and turned up the noise as Poonam Raut fell lbw. England almost claimed another wicket, with Harmanpreet Kaur given out lbw to Ecclestone, but a review showed a clear inside edge. It was a frenetic end to another absorbing day’s play. (BBC Sport)

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