Cricinfo:India in England 2007
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NatWest Series in pictures

Catch-up cricket at its best

Prev 1 of 21 Next

Ian Bell celebrates his first ODI century, England v India, 1st ODI, Southampton, August 21, 2007

The Tests series loss was a huge dampener in England’s home international season. England had a shot at redemption with the seven-one dayers and the chilly winds in Southampton hardly ruined their plans. Ian Bell proved hard to dislodge, and that became a pattern as the series progressed. In company with Cook, Bell added 178 as the Indians struggled to breakthrough. He too reached his maiden ton and his unbeaten 126 came at over a run-a-ball.

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James Anderson is overjoyed after dismissing Yuvraj Singh, England v India, 1st ODI, Southampton, August 21, 2007

The contest turned out to be hopelessly one-sided once James Anderson took control. Utilising the swing and seam on offer, he prised out three early wickets to leave India struggling at 34 for 4. He later picked up another scalp to finish with figures of 4 for 23.

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Sachin Tendulkar celebrates his fifty as team-mate Sourav Ganguly looks on, England v India, 2nd ODI, Bristol, August 24, 2007

While the Indian batting came a cropper in Southampton, in Bristol, it was a different story. A batting pitch and a minuscule ground were the ingredients in India’s revival and the opening stand of 113 between Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly led the way.

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Andrew Flintoff is congratulated by his team-mates after getting rid of Sachin Tendulkar - who fell for 99, England v India, 2nd ODI, Bristol, August 24, 2007

In case we all forgot, Andrew Flintoff picked up five wickets amid the carnage. Through the series, the team management seemed to spend more hours sweating over his fitness and his contributions and the aura of his presence proved why England needed him so badly.

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Sachin Tendulkar looks back after getting a lifter from Flintoff, which led to his dismissal, England v India, 2nd ODI, Bristol, August 24, 2007

It was the Tendulkar of old, stepping down the track and giving himself room in the most carefree manner to unleash his strokes. Unfortunately he ended up walking back to the pavilion flabbergasted as the umpire gave him the marching orders on 99. Replays showed the ball clipping the arm guard en route to Matt Prior and Tendulkar just smiled at his misfortune.

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Piyush Chawla celebrates a third strike as India claw back, England v India, 2nd ODI, Bristol, August 24, 2007

There was never a dull moment when Piyush Chawla had the ball in hand and the manner in which he outfoxed players of the calibre of Kevin Pietersen was one of the endearing images of the series. The legbreaks beat the bat, the googlies either straightened or turned the other way and each time Pietersen used his feet, a wicket was there for the taking. The celebrations that followed gave more than a glimpse of what the future had in store for India.

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An Indian fan blows a horn, England v India, 3rd ODI, Edgbaston, August 27, 2007

The atmosphere in the third one-dayer at Edgbaston was reminiscent of the cacophony of a typical Indian ground. Indian supporters showed up in large numbers and let their hair down. Despite the overwhelming support, the Indians flattered to deceive.

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Ian Bell basks in the glory after taking a catch to dismiss Ramesh Powar, England v India, 3rd ODI, Edgbaston, August 27, 2007

While the Indians set bad examples for themselves on the field, it wasn’t the case with England. They deserved to win for completely out-fielding the opposition. Ian Bell, who top-scored at Edgbaston with 79, pulled off two stunners in the inner circle. There was no doubt as to who the Man of the Match would be.

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Stuart Broad is congratulated by his team-mates after dismissing Dinesh Karthik,  England v India, 4th ODI, Old Trafford, August 30, 2007

The action shifted to Old Trafford with the Indians lagging in the series by one game. The batting, however, failed to come good and the man who dismantled the line-up was Stuart Broad, who finished with figures of 4 for 51. India ended on a modest 213.

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Ajit Agarkar celebrates Ian Bell's dismissal,  England v India, 4th ODI, Old Trafford, August 30, 2007

It was ‘game on’ when Ajit Agarkar took over. The target of 213 seemed more like 270 when England lost their third wicket at 35. Bell misjudged the line and shouldered arms, and Agarkar’s expression proved just how important a wicket it was.

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Stuart Broad and Ravi Bopara celebrate England's win, England v India, 4th ODI, Old Trafford, August 30, 2007

When all hope seemed lost at 114 for 7, Broad and Ravi Bopara took guard and never departed. The pair defied everything the Indians tried and the smiles on the visitors’ faces vanished. Bopara finished on 43 and Broad 45 and England’s young brigade scripted a thrilling finish. Broad made the match his own, and the quality of his strokes would have made any genuine top-order batsman proud.

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Yuvraj Singh flicks towards fine leg, England v India, 5th ODI, Headingley, September 2, 2007

At Leeds, the Indian batsmen rose from slumber again and the thrills were reserved for Yuvraj Singh who scored an exhilarating 72 off 57 balls to lift India to 324.

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Saurav Ganguly whoops it up after nailing Ian Bell, England v India, 5th ODI, Headingley, September 2, 2007

Rocky Balboa’s fist - Sourav Ganguly did what was expected of him as a third seamer as he inflicted two early blows to set England back. Paul Collingwood caused a few anxious moments with an unbeaten 91 but India prevailed. The series was now at 3-2 in favour of England.

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Owais Shah celebrates his maiden ODI century, England v India, 6th ODI, The Oval, September 5, 2007

The action shifted to The Oval for the sixth one-dayer and another run-fest ensued. Owais Shah, who had a quiet series prior to this match, reposed the faith in him with an attacking century.

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Dimitri Mascarenhas smashed five consecutive sixes in the final over, England v India, 6th ODI, The Oval, September 5, 2007

Dimitri Mascaranhas ended the innings in a blaze, striking five consecutive sixes in the final over off Yuvraj Singh. Yuvraj varied his length and line of attack but each time the ball met Mascarenhas’ bat, the crowd at midwicket and long-on waited in anticipation for their round of catching practice.

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Frustration gets to Stuart Broad as he has a word with Sourav Ganguly, England v India, 6th ODI, The Oval, September 5, 2007

India took on the target of 317 with another blazing opening stand between Tendulkar and Ganguly. The heat got to fielding side as the match slipped away from their grasp, which led to this confrontation between Broad and Ganguly.

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Monty Panesar celebrates after catching Gautam Gambhir, England v India, 6th ODI, The Oval, September 5, 2007

Slowly, the runs started to come off the Indian ladder and England were right back in the match. And yes, Monty can catch!

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Robin Uthappa celebrates after hitting the winning runs off Stuart Broad, England v India, 6th ODI, The Oval, September 5, 2007

Robin Uthappa, waiting on the bench till this game, came out at No. 7 and stunned England. As if stealing Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s thunder for his innovative strokes, he nudged, edged, scooped and pulled as India got closer to squaring the series. He smoked a straight drive off Broad in the final over to take India home, in what was the most thrilling encounter of the series

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Sachin Tendulkar wasn't pleased on being adjudged out, England v India, 7th ODI, Lord's, September 8, 2007

With the series tied at 3-3, the teams headed to Lord’s for the decider. India elected to bat first but the batsmen failed to come good. The umpiring didn’t go India’s way and Tendulkar was at the receiving end of another dubious decision, as was Rahul Dravid. While Tendulkar laughed it off at Bristol, he fumed at Lord’s

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England players await the third umpire's decision as India slide further, England v India, 7th ODI, Lord's, September 8, 2007

England had the hunger to win and it was obvious with their body language. India steadily lost wickets and failed to reach 200.

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England celebrate their series victory, England v India, 7th ODI, Lord's, September 8, 2007

Pietersen bucked down and steered his side home with an unbeaten 71. England won their first series win at home since 2004

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