Jasprit Bumrah etched his name in cricket history during the first Test against England, securing his 11th five-wicket haul in the World Test Championship, equaling Ravichandran Ashwin's record. He also became the first Asian player to claim 150 Test wickets in SENA countries, surpassing Wasim Akram.
At Headingley, Team India etched their name in Test cricket history by achieving the remarkable feat of scoring five individual centuries in a single match for the first time. Jaiswal, Gill, and Pant's centuries propelled India to a strong first-innings total. Despite Pope and Brook's valiant efforts, England trailed narrowly at the end of the first innings.
In the first Test against England, Prasidh Krishna had an expensive outing. He conceded runs at a high economy rate. Despite taking three wickets, he set an unwanted record. Jasprit Bumrah's five-wicket haul helped India stay competitive. England scored 465 in response to India's 471. India leads by 96 runs at the end of day three.
Jasprit Bumrah took five wickets in the first Test against England. He spoke about dropped catches and his focus on fitness over captaincy. Bumrah praised Harry Brook's batting. India aims to build a big second-innings lead. At the end of Day 3, India led by 96 runs. KL Rahul and Shubman Gill were at the crease.
Rishabh Pant etched his name in history at Headingley, becoming the first wicketkeeper-batter to score centuries in both innings of a Test. His second innings ton was followed by Sunil Gavaskar playfully urging him to repeat his first-innings somersault celebration. Pant's adaptability was also on display, shifting from aggressive shots to a defensive approach, earning praise from Deep Dasgupta.
India and England are locked in a thrilling first Test at Headingley, marked by Pant's century and Bumrah's record-equalling five-wicket haul. England responded strongly, but India fought back, setting up a tense Day 4. With India leading by 96 runs, the match hangs in the balance, promising more drama as weather and aggressive batting add to the excitement.
As Kirsty Coventry succeeds Thomas Bach as IOC president, Juan Antonio Samaranch Senior's legacy is remembered on International Olympic Day (23 June). Despite his past ties to Franco's regime and the Salt Lake City scandal, Samaranch is credited with rescuing the Olympics from financial ruin. His business acumen, including TV strategy and the TOP program, transformed the Games into a thriving entity.