
In a match that defied precedent, logic, and expectations, India etched their name in the record books for all the wrong reasons. Despite scoring five individual centuries — a feat never before seen in over 60,000 first-class matches — the visitors lost to England in the opening Test at Headingley by five wickets.
It was a match of milestones, collapses, and calculated aggression. The final chapter of the Headingley Test now reads as one of cricket’s most bizarre and unforgettable results.
Five Hundreds, Two Collapses — A Story of Extremes
India’s innings scores were dotted with brilliance:
These were not scratchy fifties or fleeting knocks. These were commanding, fluent, and momentum-shifting centuries — all delivered by top-order batters who looked in complete control for long stretches.
Yet, the match’s turning point wasn’t about the runs scored but the moments of collective failure.
Collapse 1: 7 for 41 (1st Innings)
After posting a strong 430+ with the help of three centuries, India looked primed to push beyond 550. But England’s bowlers came roaring back. The collapse cost India time, runs, and psychological control.
Collapse 2: 6 for 31 (2nd Innings)
The second innings followed an eerily similar pattern. After centuries from KL Rahul and Rishabh Pant took India past 360, another collapse followed — this time even more sudden. Six wickets tumbled for just 31 runs. What should have been a target over 400 became 371 — a chaseable score on a fifth-day Headingley pitch.
Josh Tongue: England’s Unsung Hero
While Ben Duckett and England’s top order earned praise for completing the historic chase, the match’s real architect may well have been Josh Tongue. The England pacer finished with seven wickets in the match, and more importantly, removed key lower-order batters in both innings — when momentum could have decisively shifted India’s way.
“I don’t mind bowling at the tail. You’ve got a good opportunity to take wickets. All I tried to do was to hit the pitch hard,” Tongue said after the win.
And that’s exactly what he did. With raw pace, bounce, and an attacking mindset, Tongue consistently broke through partnerships, exposed the tail, and cleaned it up before it could wag. His spell in both innings ensured India’s monumental top-order efforts never converted into match-winning totals.
India’s Historic First — But With an Asterisk
The record books will remember this match as the first in cricket history where a team scored five individual centuries in a single match — and still lost.
No team, not in over two centuries of first-class cricket, has experienced this paradox. Even Australia’s famous 1928 loss to England, despite four hundreds, pales in comparison. India went a step further with five, and yet walked off second-best.
England’s Ruthless Execution
The tailenders contributed with crucial runs and the fielding unit remained sharp throughout. The bowlers stuck to their plans, exploiting India’s tail and capitalizing on fielding errors with deadly accuracy.
What’s Next for India?
With four Tests still to go in the series, India must now regroup.
Do they bring in a second spinner like Ravichandran Ashwin?
Will they persist with Prasidh Krishna and Harshit Rana, who looked raw and lacked bite?
Can they fix their slip cordon issues quickly enough?
Should they change the batting order to offer more protection to the tail?
These are not easy questions — but after such a landmark loss, answers must come fast.
Test cricket thrives on contradictions — and Headingley delivered one of the sport’s grandest.
Five centuries from one team
A fourth-innings chase of 371
Collapses that defied momentum
An unsung pacer delivering match-turning spells
For England, it’s a moment of pride. For India, a painful but educational chapter.
Because in Test cricket, no amount of centuries can protect you from the consequences of a collapse.
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