India's Fielding Woes Under Scrutiny After Test Defeat to England: 'Simple Catches Cost Us,' Says Former Selector

Saturday - 12/07/2025 03:04
India faced a defeat against England in the first Test at Headingley. Kiran More emphasized the importance of fielding. He noted dropped catches proved costly. England chased down 371 runs. Shubman Gill, Rishabh Pant, and Yashasvi Jaiswal scored centuries in the first innings. More believes the team is in transition. He asks for time and support for the new players.

Former Selector Criticizes India's Fielding After First Test Loss to England

Kiran More, former Indian cricket selector and wicketkeeper, has called for patience with the Indian Test team following their five-wicket defeat to England in the first Test at Headingley. More pinpointed fielding lapses as a critical factor in the loss.

Yashasvi Jaiswal celebrates his century against England

Yashasvi Jaiswal earlier in the match.

"We played very well for four days," More told IANS. "I think the mistake came on the last day when England played outstanding cricket. Fielding was where we slipped. Those were simple catches — no one drops those — and that made the difference."

England successfully chased down a target of 371 runs on the final day to take a 1-0 lead in the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy. Ben Duckett led the charge with a score of 149, while Joe Root remained unbeaten on 53, and Jamie Smith contributed 44 not out. This victory represents England's second-highest successful chase in Test history and their highest against India.

"In the first two days, we were really good, and I felt we could've added another 100–150 runs to our total. If we had scored 450 in the first innings, things might've been different. In the second innings, Rishabh and KL Rahul did well. But again, we collapsed at key moments."

India's first innings total of 471 included centuries from Shubman Gill (147), Rishabh Pant (134), and Yashasvi Jaiswal (101). However, the team suffered a significant collapse, losing seven wickets for only 41 runs. England responded with 465, with notable contributions from Duckett (62), Ollie Pope (106), and Brook (99). Their last five wickets added 189 runs.

In their second innings, India appeared to be in a commanding position at 333/4, fueled by a 195-run partnership between Pant (118) and K.L. Rahul (137). However, the team then experienced another collapse, losing six wickets for 31 runs and ultimately being dismissed for 364, setting England a target of 371.

"We've got a good, balanced team, but this team is still in transition. I think we need to give them time — a year or so — to settle, find the right combination, and grow into a strong unit. We've scored over 750 runs across both innings, so the batting is there. But we can't keep depending on Bumrah. He needs support — especially from the spinners."

Jasprit Bumrah went wicketless in the second innings despite his best efforts. Prasidh Krishna's performance proved expensive, and several dropped catches, particularly of Harry Brook, proved costly for the Indian team.

"We've seen it before — from Gavaskar, Kapil Dev, Sachin, to Kohli and Rohit. Now it's time for new faces to step up. They need time and support. If we keep playing like this and keep making the same mistakes, we won't improve. But give this group time, and we'll have a good team."

The successful chase at Headingley marked the third time a target over 350 has been achieved at this venue. The match also became only the third in Test history where all four innings exceeded 350 runs.

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