Tuesday, July 14


Sneh Rana, centre, celebrates with teammates after removing Sophie Ecclestone.
| Photo Credit: AP

At 12.35 p.m. on a glorious Monday, Sneh Rana ambled up to the wicket, tossed the ball up nicely. It turned, and beat Sophie Ecclestone.

The ball went through the gate and hit the stumps. The bails went up in the air. As did Sneh’s outstretched hands. She smiled broadly, looking upwards. Her teammates hugged her, and they all celebrated.

Famous victory

And there cannot have been too many bigger moments to celebrate than this. A Test victory at Lord’s. In the first ever women’s Test at cricket’s most revered venue.

India won by 270 runs. The margin truly reflected the difference between the two sides.

This was truly a win for the ages by the Indian women’s cricket team.

Chasing an unlikely 457 to win, England had resumed the final day at 130 for six. Amy Jones, who was batting on 52 at the end of the third day, was the last proper batter.

But England’s only real hope rested on a miraculous intervention from the weather. This, however, has been one of the hottest summers in the history of Britain, and there was no chance of rain.

That England managed to take the game to the final day was itself an achievement, thanks largely to that fine effort from Jones. The gritty wicketkeeper-batter scored two half-centuries in the match while Ecclestone managed a fifty before being the final victim.

Early breakthrough

Jones, however, couldn’t stretch her innings much on the final morning. And it was Sneh who got her out, in the third over of the day. Jones gave an easy catch to mid-wicket, where she was picked up by Shafali Verma.

Ecclestone, the other overnight batter, however, was in no hurry to walk back through the long room.

The world’s premier spinner, who had become a day ago the first Englishwoman to make it to the Lord’s honours board with her five-wicket haul, was determined to put the Indians on the field as long as she could.

Double blow

Ecclestone watched offie Deepti Sharma clean up Issy Wong and Lauren Bell in successive overs.

But she received some support from Lauren Filer, who defended stoutly and helped Ecclestone score what would be her maiden Test fifty.

Filer actually played 20 dot balls before getting her first run.

England’s No. 11 actually showed more application than some of the batters that came higher up the order.

When that last-wicket partnership was worth 27, Sneh came up with that ball she, and India, will remember for a long time.



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