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    Third Test on a knife's edge as England sends Indian wickets tumbling late – Australian Broadcasting Corporation


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    Topic:Cricket
    England's Brydon Carse duelled with India's Akash Deep in a tense day four at Lord's. (Getty Images: Clive Mason)
    India lost four wickets late on day four and needs 135 more runs to claim victory at Lord's.
    England needs six wickets to win, with the victor taking a 2-1 series lead heading into the fourth Test.
    Play resumes on day five from 8pm AEST at Lord's, with India 4-58.
    England has dismissed four Indian batters and given the Lord's Test another twist of fate to leave it on a knife-edge heading toward the fifth and final day.
    India set itself a winning target of 193 runs but was reduced to 4-58 in its second innings overnight. Stumps, with eight overs remaining, came as a relief to India, with England fired up and a sun-soaked Lord's crowd turned happily hostile.
    For one of the teams to take a 2-1 lead in the five-match series, England needs six more wickets or India needs 135 more runs.
    Asked for a prediction, India's Washington Sundar smiled and said his team was in the box seat to claim the win. 
    "Definitely India winning tomorrow. Just after lunch," he said.
    "The position we are in right now, we would have taken. Maybe one down would be ideal."
    Opening batter Lokesh Rahul will resume on 33 not out but with the ball only 17.4 overs old and still juicy.
    India began its chase after tea and appeared to weather the early storm after Yashasvi Jaiswal fell to Jofra Archer for a duck and fellow opener Rahul was dropped on five by Chris Woakes.
    Rahul and Karun Nair piled more hurt on England and were chipping runs off the target until nearly an hour later when Nair left a straight delivery from seamer Brydon Carse and was plumb LBW.
    India appeared to panic. In came captain Shubman Gill, the series' most prolific batter. But he was unusually anxious, played six false shots in the nine balls he faced, and was out LBW to Carse for six.
    That huge wicket sent England into orbit and Carse into overdrive.
    India sent in fast bowler Akash Deep as a nightwatchman and for the last 15 minutes of the day he was targeted. Deep survived a video review on umpire's call and multiple LBW and catch appeals off Carse. But it was Stokes who smashed his off stump in what turned out to be the last ball of a remarkable day.
    The inspired Carse had 2-11 and Stokes 1-15.
    In all, 14 wickets fell on day four.
    "When the ball gets a little bit softer, there are more runs to be had out there, but if you get it enough in the right place [the pitch is] very tricky," England batting coach Marcus Trescothick told the BBC. 
    "It'll come down to who holds the pressure best tomorrow."
    England was fielding on days two and three and gave its bowlers only 61 overs of rest before it was bowling again on day four.
    England was batting at 4-154 in the afternoon session and looking good to post a challenging target but it suffered a collapse of 6-38 to be all out for 192.
    For some reason, the pitch turned nasty overnight. It was offering plenty for the new-ball seamers and India's Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj made deliveries fly off a length and rear up almost dangerously. On this minefield, four England batters blew up in the morning.
    Ben Duckett swatted straight to mid-on and Siraj followed through by screaming "come on" twice in Duckett's face and they brushed shoulders. Siraj got Ollie Pope next, LBW for four after a review.
    Zak Crawley's brave but skittish innings finished on 22, edging a drive at Nitish Kumar Reddy.
    Harry Brook relieved the tension by scooping Deep for two boundaries and smashing him into the members' pavilion. But Brook then tried sweeping the seamer and was bowled around his pads on 23.
    Tune in for the latest cricket news, interviews and analysis from the ABC team in the Grandstand Cricket Podcast.
    Joe Root and Stokes took England to lunch on 4-98 and spent the afternoon edging their team toward a defendable target; 250 in the mind of most observers.
    The pitch eased as the ball softened and Root and Stokes took England past 100 and 150.
    Then off-spinner Sundar regained the momentum for India when he found drift and spin and bowled Root on 40 (sweeping), Jamie Smith on 8 (defending), Stokes on 33 (sweeping) and Shoaib Bashir on 0 (defending).
    Sundar had 4-22 in 12.1 overs, the best figures by an India spinner in England in 23 years.
    Bumrah took 2-38 and Siraj 2-31.
    "They were all big wickets, especially [at] the stage of play," Sundar said. 
    "The UK has been kind. I don't get as much drift in subcontinent conditions."
    A dozen England batters in the match were bowled, the most by England in a Test since 1887 in Sydney. It had never happened in England. Six of the bowleds in the match were by Bumrah. That was a first for India against England. The last bowler to bowl six Englishmen was Curtly Ambrose in 1994 at Port of Spain.
    But India's terrific bowling effort showed England what kind of damage it can do, too, and set up the match for a thrilling finale at a sold-out Lords.
    AP
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