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England and India down the years.


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England v India, 1st Test, Lord's, 1932: India's opening bowlers Nissar and Amar Singh caused a flutter in the English camp by reducing them to 19 for 3 on the first morning. Herbert Sutcliffe bowled by Nissar was India's first Test wicket

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England v India, 1st Test, Lord's, 1932:Douglas Jardine, who would attain notoriety on the tour of Australia later in the year, rescued his side with a half-century. CK Nayudu (bowler) had helped India attain Test status with his belligerent 153 for Hindus against an MCC team in Mumbai in 1926-27. But when he was named captain for the match some of the Indian players protested as they did not want to play under someone not of royal heritage

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India v England, 1st Test, Mumbai, 1933: The first Test played in India was at the Bombay Gymkhana. Lala Amarnath scored India's first Test century in front of a crowd of 50,000 people but England ended up winners by nine wickets

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India in England, 1936: The 1936 tour of England was marred by the controversy surrounding the Maharajah of Vizianagram, universally known as Vizzy, whose appointment as captain of India was based not on his talent but his social status and deep pockets

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England v India, 1st Test, Headingley, 1952:India's first post-independence tour of England started in dreadful fashion, as in the second innings of the first Test they collapsed to an embarrassing 0 for 4. That gave rise to a sequence in which India would lose eight out of nine Tests to England

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England v India, 3rd Test, Old Trafford, 1952:The Headingley Test saw Fred Trueman take seven wickets on debut. He then bowled a sensational spell of 8 for 31 in 8.4 overs in Manchester, and finished with 29 wickets in the series

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England v India, 2nd Test, Lord's, 1952: Just months before the 3-0 thrashing in England, India had been celebrating their maiden Test win, in Chennai. There, Vinoo Mankad had taken 12 wickets to secure the win. In the second Test on the England tour, he put in a remarkable all-round performance. Mankad scored 72 in the first innings, then bowled 73 overs for five wickets, before coming back out to bat and score 184

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England v India, 1st Test, Headingley, 1967:After India's first series victory against England in 1961-62 and a dull 0-0 draw in 1963-64, the 1967 series featured perhaps the most infamous double-century in Test history. Geoff Boycott crawled to 246 in 573 minutes in what the Times' John Woodcock described as "more of an occupation than an innings". England won the Test but Boycott was dropped for selfish batting

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England v India, 1st Test, Headingley, 1967:The Headingley Test also saw Nawab of Pataudi junior score his only Test century outside India. His 148 was one of the few bright spots for India on a tour during which they were hit by several injuries and lost 3-0

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England v India, 3rd Test, The Oval, 1971: In the third Test on India's 1971 tour of England Eknath Solkar caught Alan Knott at short leg in what is considered as one of the inflection points in the modern history of Indian cricket. India went on to win the Test and complete their first series victory in England

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India v England, 5th Test, Mumbai, 1973:England's 1972-73 tour of India was a feisty encounter, during which the England players, in particular Tony Greig, were involved in several altercations with the umpires. However, the series, which India won 2-1, ended on a friendly note with Greig cradling Gundappa Viswanath after he had reached his century in Mumbai and singing him a lullaby. When Greig then scored a hundred in the same match, Sunil Gavaskar called Viswanath and they both tried to lift Greig. Of course, they couldn't!

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England v India, 2nd Test, Lord's, 1974: In 1974, a highly-rated India side capitulated to the team's lowest score in Test history. The 42 all out on the fourth day at Lord's is still considered one of the all-time lows in Indian cricket

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England in India, 1976-77: In 1977, England won their first Test series in India. However, the series was clouded by the controversy surrounding the Vaseline-impregnated gauze that England seamers John Lever and Bob Willis wore on their foreheads during the third Test in Chennai. The gauze bands were meant to prevent sweat from entering the bowlers' eyes, but Lever allegedly rubbed Vaseline on the ball to help it swing. He took seven wickets in the Test.

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India in England, 1979: During the 1979 tour of England, Sunil Gavaskar and Gundappa Viswanath consolidated their reputation as two of the world's top batsmen. Gavaskar scored 542 runs on the tour, while Viswanath got 341

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England v India, 2nd Test, Lord's, 1979:England won the series, though, and Ian Botham began what was to be three years of remarkable performances against India with 20 wickets in the series, including his 100th Test scalp, taken in the second Test, at Lord's

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England v India, 4th Test, The Oval, 1979: The series ended with Gavaskar scoring 221, which almost helped India chase 438 and level the series. The match was abandoned by both captains with India needing nine to win off the last ball of the fifth day

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India v England, Golden Jubilee Test, Mumbai, 1980: The Botham-Gavaskar duel continued in the 50th Test between the two countries, played in Mumbai. Botham won easily, taking 13 wickets and scoring a century in the Test.

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England in India, 1981-82: On England's tour of India in 1981-82, Geoff Boycott became the world's leading run-getter in Tests, surpassing Gary Sobers' 8032 runs during the Delhi Test. Ian Botham ribbed Boycott at a party and the latter then retired after the fourth Test. India won the six-match series 1-0

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England v India, 3rd Test, The Oval, 1982:Botham wasn't fooling around when India went to England in the summer of 1982, though. At The Oval, he raced to a double-century off 220 balls - a world record that stood for 19 years

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England v India, 1st Test, Lord's, 1982: During the same series, Dilip Vengsarkar continued the love affair he had started with Lord's three years before, with a century in the first Test. He would go on to get a third ton at Lord's in India's 2-0 series win in 1986

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