16 December,2012 03:27 AM IST | | David Clough
England began to worry they might take no wickets at all on day three in Nagpur on Saturday - before four came along in the last hour to make it "neck and neck" again in the final Test.u00a0Alastair Cook's tourists drew a blank while Virat Kohli (103) and India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni (99) relentlessly compiled a fifth-wicket stand of 198.
Once the centurion went lbw to Graeme Swann, though, England seized their chance to redress the balance as day three ended with honours close to even.u00a0Only the implications of a series score already 2-1 to England means the state of play - India 297 for eight in reply to 330 all out - favours Cook and Co, who need only a draw here to stay in front and wrap up the four-match contest.
They retained that consolation throughout a taxing day. But as Jonathan Trott confirmed, during the 84 overs it took to part Kohli and Dhoni, England did at times wonder if the breakthrough would ever come. Asked whether that thought entered their minds, Trott said: "Of course. They were playing really well... but then Graeme bowled a great ball to Virat Kohli, and it can change the day like that."
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Trott, among the frontline batsmen England will be hoping can keep India at bay in return, congratulated Kohli and Dhoni on their efforts - and his own team on theirs. "They played unbelievably well for five hours, and credit to them for that," he said.u00a0"But we stuck to our guns, kept the pressure on them and eventually we got a breakthrough and were able to push on. You've just got to trust yourself and your team-mates that when you get the chance you're able to take it - which happened.
"Five hours without a wicket, then four wickets in an hour - that's what can happen, a fantastic advertisement for the game."u00a0Trott is taking nothing for granted, but senses Cook's direct-hit run-out of Dhoni might yet tilt the series England's way once and for all.u00a0It was reminiscent of the moment Andrew Flintoff ran out Ricky Ponting as the 2009 Ashes were clinched at The Oval - a fact not lost on Trott, on debut then and a mainstay of England success since.u00a0"It changes things massively, obviously," he said.
"It's a credit to the guys for sticking it out for five hours, not getting a wicket, and then coming back into the game and evening it out. It's pretty neck and neck. It's thanks to the bowlers - and then to get a chance like Alastair did, and to be able to take it, is a game-changer and maybe a series-changer." Trott also references Ian Bell's direct-hit run-out to kickstart India's collapse at Eden Gardens last week in England's seven-wicket win there.
Of Dhoni's dismissal, trying to scamper his 100th run, he said: "It was tight, but he is very quick between the wickets.u00a0"So that makes that bit of fielding by Alastair even better, especially having to go to his left and hit the stumps with his momentum going the other way. It's a bit like Fred's run-out in 2009, maybe the catalyst for changing the game.u00a0"We got a run-out like that in Kolkata as well, so we hope it can help to maybe win us this game,"
he added.
- PA Sport