News Sports Cricket Ind vs Eng, 5th Test: India strikes early, England 68/2 at lunch

Ind vs Eng, 5th Test: India strikes early, England 68/2 at lunch

Visitors England have won the toss and elected to bat first in the last match of the five-Test series against India at MA Chidambaram Stadium here today.

Ind vs Eng, 5th Test: England win toss, elect to bat first Ind vs Eng, 5th Test: England win toss, elect to bat first

Indian bowlers struck early blows as England posted 68/2 at lunch on the first day of the fifth and final cricket Test here on Friday.

Joe Root (44) and Moeen Ali (7) were at the crease at the break.

Pacer Ishant Sharma struck the first blow for the hosts by sending back the in-form Keaton Jennings.

Left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja continued his excellent record against Alistair Cook, inducing an outer edge from the England captain that was snapped up by his Indian counterpart Virat Kohli in the slips.

Brief scores:

England: 68/2 (Joe Root batting, Ishant Sharma 1-5, Ravindra Jadeja 1-12) vs India.

Liam Dawson and Stuart Broad were named while James Anderson and Chris Woakes were left out in the team by England.

India made a change, replacing pacer Bhuvneshwar Kumar with Ishant Sharma.

India are leading the five-match series 3-0 and should they taste success in the final Test, it will be their biggest against England, the previous being the 3-0 whitewash in 1992-93 under Mohammed Azharuddin's captaincy. 

It will be a sweet revenge for the twin defeats, including a 4-0 drubbing in 2011, which India suffered at the hands of England in the last two series between the two nations. 

Having clinched the rubber, skipper Virat Kohli has asserted that India would now "really express ourselves fully" and hope to make it 4-0 against opponents who are looking bruised and battered. 

Kohli has been in the form of his life, having become the first Indian to notch up three double centuries in a calendar year. 

Entering the game on the back of a monumental 235 in Mumbai, Kohli is in no mood to relax and is expected to pile more misery on the beleaguered English outfit. 

The 28-year-old, who is among just five batsmen, including Don Bradman and Ricky Ponting, to amass three double-centuries in a single year, is 135 short of bettering Sunil Gavaskar's (774 runs) record of most runs by an Indian in a single series. 

Undoubtedly, Kohli will once again be the cynosure of all eyes at Chepauk, which is hosting a Test after a gap of three years during which time India have risen to number one in the ICC rankings. 

While Kohli loves to lead from the front, he has in his arsenal an array of players who can produce match-winning performances, be it with the willow or the ball.

Right from the top to bottom, the team looks balanced and full of infectious energy. 

Murali Vijay has established himself as a dependable opener and has already slammed two centuries in the ongoing series. 

The Chennai lad's opening partner, the young and extremely talented KL Rahul, is always on the lookout for runs, though he could not make it big in Mumbai after missing the third Test in Mohali. 

Cheteshwar Pujara has been solid at the crucial number three position and would look to make it count after failing to capitalise on the start in the last game. 

Doing duty in the absence of first-choice wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha, Parthiv Patel has not done too badly either after making a comeback after eight years. 

Ravichandran Ashwin has been enjoying a phenomenal run and the off-spinner, with 247 wickets, is on the verge of becoming the fastest to reach 250 scalps in Tests, ahead of Australian pace legend Dennis Lillee, who got there in 48. 

Ashwin already has 27 wickets in this series, way ahead of Adil Rashid of England, who has 22. He is comfortably placed as the best in the world at the moment, and the local boy is more than average with the bat. 

Ravindra Jadeja has been a perfect foil to Ashwin, often providing the key breakthroughs, his sharp left-arm spin leaving the Englishmen in a bind. He too is no bunny with the bat, clearly showing the all-round strength of the team. 

The young Jayant Yadav impressed by becoming the first Indian number nine batsman to score a century during his huge partnership with Kohli last week. 

In the absence of Mohammed Shami, Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Umesh Yadav will fill in the fast bowling department. 

Post the catastrophe, the city will look to Kohli's men to bring some cheer to fans. Even as Chennai showed tremendous fighting abilities, the visiting England team can take a cue from the city's resilience to score a consolation win at the venue where they have scored their highest Test total in India till date - 652 for seven declared in January 1985. 

With questions being raised over his future as captain, Alastair Cook will be keen to turn around what has so far been a winter of discontent and restore some pride before they go into the Christmas break. 

Both the teams are unlikely to get a feel of the ground before the real action kicks off. 

Teams: 

India: Virat Kohli (Captain), Murali Vijay, KL Rahul, Cheteshwar Pujara, Manish Pandey, Ravichandran Ashwin, Parthiv Patel, Ravindra Jadeja, Amit Mishra, Shardul Thakur, Umesh Yadav, Karun Nair, Jayant Yadav, Bhuvneshwar Kumar. 

England: Alastair Cook (Captain), Keaton Jennings, Moeen Ali, Jonny Bairstow (WK), Jake Ball, Gary Ballance, Gareth Batty, Stuart Broad, Jos Buttler, Ben Duckett, Steven Finn, Liam Dawson, Adil Rashid, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Chris Woakes.