IND vs ENG: Drop Crisis! India’s catching woes undermine Test campaign in England | Cricket News
NEW DELHI: A young and transitioning Indian Test team arrived in England with cautious optimism for a competitive five-match series. But three Tests in, they trail 1-2 – and while the contest is still alive, India’s biggest opponent has been itself, particularly in the field.India’s catching woes have become a glaring concern, with the team registering a shockingly poor catching efficiency of just 60.90% – having dropped 18 catches and held only 28 in the series so far. By contrast, England have taken 36 and dropped 10, posting a far superior 78.30% efficiency.
Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!These drops haven’t just been statistical blemishes – they’ve proven decisive.
Poll
Will India be able to improve their catching efficiency in the remaining Tests?
In the series opener at Headingley, India posted a strong first-innings total of 471 after being inserted to bat. But the advantage was squandered when five catches were shelled in England’s reply – the most India had dropped in a single innings in five years.The misses proved costly:
- Ollie Pope, dropped on 60, went on to make 106.
- Ben Duckett, spilled on 15, scored 62.
- Harry Brook, given life on 58, missed a ton by one run.
England eventually finished just six runs short of India’s total – a margin that underlined how crucial those missed chances were.Even on the final day, India continued to let opportunities slip. Duckett was put down by Yashasvi Jaiswal on 97 and went on to hammer 149. Bumrah, India’s bowling spearhead, failed to cling onto a difficult one-hander offered by Zak Crawley, who scored 65.While India bounced back with a resounding 336-run win in the second Test at Birmingham – aided by improved fielding and sharp catching – the issue resurfaced at Lord’s in the third Test, a narrow 22-run defeat.
The drop that arguably cost India the match came in England’s first innings. KL Rahul dropped Jamie Smith on 5, who went on to score a vital 51. Along with Brydon Carse (56), the duo added over 100 runs for the final three wickets, dragging England from 271/7 to 387 – the difference that ultimately proved too much for India to overcome.India’s top-tier bowling and brilliance with the bat have been undermined by this recurring fielding failure. If they are to turn the tide and win the remaining two Tests, improving their catching efficiency is non-negotiable. Otherwise, the series – and all the hard work invested – could well be lost in the slips.