Ind vs Eng, 4th Test, 3rd day – As It Happened

All the colour and analyses from day three of the final Test of the series

Alan Gardner06-Mar-2021*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates. All times are local

3.47pm: Ashwin completes 30th five-for, India are WTC finalists

India have wrapped up a convincing innings victory to seal a 3-1 series result and a spot in the World Test Championship final, after England collapsed against spin for the final time on tour. Although Washington Sundar was left high and dry four runs short of a maiden Test hundred, Axar Patel hounded the visitors for his fourth five-for of an immensely impressive debut series to help confirm the inevitable midway through the evening session on day three.

3.40pm: Lawrence reaches fifty

A second Test fifty for Dan Lawrence, who is one of perhaps only two England batsman to come out of this tour of Asia with his credentials enhanced, alongside Joe Root. He struggled in the Chennai Tests, looking ill-suited to the No. 3 role that he has only rarely filled at domestic level, but with the pressure off at No. 7 he has been positive and – generally – calm in this Test.Dan Lawrence sweeps in the first-innings•Getty Images

He’s England’s top-scorer in the match, and Sampath Bandarupalli tells me that he’s also the only Englishman to make a second-innings half-century in the series.Jack Leach survived on review a couple of overs ago, but has now been caught well at slip by Ajinkya Rahane, and India are a wicket away from reaching the inaugural WTC final.

3.10pm: Patel five-for!

Axar Patel celebrates a wicket with an excited Virat Kohli•BCCI

Axar Patel’s storming debut series continues with a fourth five-wicket haul in three Tests! Bess doesn’t last long, feathering a big swipe through to Pant, meaning Patel now has 27 at 10.07. That dismissal also means that 102 wickets have fallen to spinners in the series – the third-highest of all time in Tests. Two more and India are going to the WTC final, baby!

3.02pm: Jinxed

That’s how to take wickets, boys… Having bobbed along nicely for a bit, Foakes suddenly pokes at one from Patel and diverts a catch to slip. Ajinkya Rahane didn’t look too confident that he had caught it, diving across to his left, and the soft signal from the umpires was ‘not out’. But replays showed him scooping it up safely, and that’s the stand broken. Seems a long, long time ago (the first innings in Chennai, in fact) that England last managed a fifty partnership.

3pm: End game

Axar Patel bowls•Saikat Das/BCCI

Some jiggery pokery going on, Ashwin replacing Sundar after one over, bowling two and then deciding he wants a change of ends – so Sundar gets another over, before then being switched for Patel. Still plenty for the spinners to work with out there, even though the ball is 40-plus overs old – good bounce in particular, with Lawrence’s splice and gloves wearing a few. But these two are ticking along quite nicely for England, bringing the deficit down towards 50.

2.40pm: Breathe

Washington Sundar is on for a bowl after tea, and who wouldn’t want to see him bag a few cheap wickets to make up for that missed hundred? Well, apart from the England team, coaches, supporters, etc. You sense the tourists know the jig is almost up, but there are still individual points to be made for the likes of Dan Lawrence, Ben Foakes and Dom Bess, all of whom could be out of the XI come England’s next Test, against New Zealand in June.

2.10pm: Tea

Axar Patel celebrates a wicket•Getty Images

India rounded up six wickets in the session between lunch and tea to close in on victory and a place in the World Test Championship final. R Ashwin and Axar Patel shared them evenly, as England’s struggles against spin seemed set to bring a premature end to the fourth Test.Trailing by 160 on first innings, England’s openers walked out having negotiated a three-over spell before the break. But it took barely any time for India to start making inroads as Ashwin struck with his fourth and fifth balls – Zak Crawley was taken at slip by one that went straight on, then Jonny Bairstow turned to leg slip to collect a golden duck.Dom Sibley was a little unfortunate, caught via a rebound from short leg on the sweep, to give Patel his first, before Ben Stokes presented another simple catch to leg slip. After a brief period of calm, Ollie Pope was stumped down the leg side by Rishabh Pant, and Joe Root then fell lbw to Ashwin in the following over.England limped to tea with Dan Lawrence and Ben Foakes at the crease, but facing a battle to take the game into a fourth day, never mind make India bat again.

2pm: Commemorative hats off

Sunil Gavaskar celebrating the 50th anniversary of his Test debut•BCCI

India aren’t quite celebrating victory yet, but there’s a demob mood in the Star commentary box, where Sunil Gavaskar is having a jolly nice Test debut 50th anniversary (if that’s a thing). Sunny would doubtless have plenty to say about English batting techniques, but thankfully everyone seems more interested in cake…

1.40pm: Bang-bang! India closing in

We have a period of quiet, though Ollie Pope looked skittish throughout and eventually becomes a third wicket for Patel. Another fine bit of work behind the stumps from Rishabh Pant, who is another genuine contender for Man of the Series. He managed to cling on as the ball practically hit him in the collar bone, then broke the bails before it squirmed out of his grasp – his fifth stumping in four Tests. And then Ashwin ices the cake, trapping Root bang in front on the back foot, straightforward decision for Nitin Menon (despite a confident review from Root).And with that wicket, Ashwin joins the great SF Barnes as the only men to twice take more than 30 wickets in a series of four matches or fewer. Decent company (though Barnes had a far better moustache).

1.15pm: Last orders?

Virat Kohli is thrilled as R Ashwin strikes•Getty Images

Has it only been an hour since lunch? England take drinks on 46 for 4, Root the only batsman in double-figures. Still 115 more needed to make India bat again. Even the barman in the last-chance saloon would be looking at his watch and thinking about calling time.

1.05pm: Vote early, vote often