Ravi Bopara and Stuart Broad’s thrilling 99-run partnership (see
video) continues to warm the cockles of the English media, and Bopara has revealed how his experience in this year’s World Cup helped him through at Old Trafford last week.
Bopara's remarkable cool would have been tested after a mix-up with his captain, Paul Collingwood, resulted in the latter being run out for 47. But instead of rebuke, Bopara found his captain encouraging him to take responsibility for winning the match.
"He was very good about it and when he was given out on the replay he looked me in the eyes and said, 'Finish the game for us'. I told him I would.
"I don't think there was any blame for the run-out, but you can't afford to dwell on it. It was just a mix-up."
In the
same paper Sue Mott meets a very humble Paul Collingwood, England’s one-day captain.
"Everyone asks who were your heroes growing up. I didn't actually have heroes. It was my brother, Peter, four years older than me. Even though he beat me up. Not really, it was just the competition between us. I wanted to be better than my brother at everything, cricket in the street, football. I wanted to do the same things as him, support the same team as him, everything.
"He was a policeman. He's a plumber now. He still plays cricket at weekends. He gets a hell of a lot of stick. He loves seeing what I'm doing, watching the games I'm playing.
"I got my values from my parents. They're just so proud of me, it's unbelievable. My mam's just retired a couple of weeks ago after working as a ward aid in a mental hospital. My dad's a maintenance fitter for a caravan company. Their holidays are watching cricket. That's all they do. They'd never been abroad until two years ago.
Over at the
Times, Richard Hobson wonders where it has all gone right for England.
They have taken a 3-1 lead over India while Kevin Pietersen’s biggest contribution has been the wicket of Sachin Tendulkar and Andrew Flintoff has yet to find his timing at the crease. Flintoff has been exceptional with the ball, but the stars of the first four games have been Ian Bell and James Anderson, both 25, and Stuart Broad, 21.