Venue a solace for beleagured India
India, thoroughly outclassed with bat and ball so far, have to derive inspiration from their record at The Oval to avoid their first 4-0 series defeat in almost 20 years

Kevin Pietersen has scored three centuries in five matches at the Oval • Getty Images
Period | Matches | Wins | Losses | Draws | W/L ratio | Batting avg | Bowling avg | Avg diff |
Overall | 93 | 38 | 19 | 36 | 2.00 | 34.04 | 29.77 | 4.27 |
1990 onwards | 21 | 10 | 6 | 5 | 1.66 | 34.45 | 35.70 | -1.25 |
2000 onwards | 11 | 6 | 2 | 3 | 3.00 | 37.56 | 35.55 | 2.01 |
v India | 10 | 2 | 1 | 7 | 2.00 | 45.01 | 34.50 | 10.51 |
v India since 1990 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | - | 54.00 | 55.94 | -1.94 |
The Oval has by far been the best batting venue in England in Tests since 2000. In the first innings, teams have averaged nearly 42 runs per wicket with seven centuries. The second innings has been slightly more even with the runs-per-wicket figure dropping to 35.37. While the third innings has proved to be the most challenging for batting (average 31.32), the pitch has demonstrated a tendency to become easier for batting in the fourth innings (average 37.72).
Innings | Runs per wicket | 100s/50s | Wickets, avg (pace) | Wickets, avg (spin) |
1st innings | 41.92 | 7/24 | 73, 39.39 | 26, 43.50 |
2nd innings | 35.37 | 8/17 | 73, 37.71 | 25, 34.32 |
3rd innings | 31.32 | 5/11 | 64, 29.56 | 23, 34.60 |
4th innings | 37.72 | 2/5 | 22, 38.86 | 11, 41.72 |
Overall | 36.58 | 22/57 | 232, 36.10 | 85, 38.16 |
While India have failed to reach 300 in any of their six innings, England have rattled up scores of 474, 544 and 710 in the three Tests. Alastair Cook, who had a disappointing start to the series, roared back to form with 294 in the third Test at Edgbaston. Cook averages nearly 47 at The Oval, and he, together with captain Andrew Strauss (473 runs at 39.41), will hold the key to a strong start. India will be especially wary of Kevin Pietersen, the top run-getter of the series, who has a superb record at the venue. In ten innings at The Oval, he has scored 552 runs with three centuries including a brilliant 158 to help England regain the Ashes in 2005.
Batsman | Innings | Runs | Average | 100/50 |
Kevin Pietersen | 10 | 552 | 55.20 | 3/1 |
Andrew Strauss | 12 | 473 | 39.41 | 1/4 |
Alastair Cook | 10 | 468 | 46.80 | 1/3 |
Ian Bell | 10 | 252 | 28.00 | 0/3 |
Matt Prior | 6 | 123 | 30.75 | 0/1 |
India's top-order batsmen (positions 1-7) have struggled against the high-quality display of England's pace bowlers in all three Tests. While Virender Sehwag fell for a first-ball duck in both innings on his comeback, the rest of the top order except Tendulkar failed to handle the threat of James Anderson and Stuart Broad with any degree of assurance in the second innings of the third Test. In fact, the stats of Indian batsmen in Tests outside the subcontinent show that most of them haven't done so well against pace. However, almost all batsmen have handled spinners with ease. The one exception to the rule is Sehwag, who has scored at nearly seven runs per over against spinners, but has been dismissed four times.
Batsman | Runs/dismissals (pace) | Average/run-rate(pace) | Runs/dismissals(spin) | Average/run-rate(spin) |
Virender Sehwag | 505/13 | 38.84/4.26 | 76/4 | 19.00/6.90 |
Gautam Gambhir | 550/9 | 61.11/2.68 | 226/4 | 56.50/2.72 |
Rahul Dravid | 1008/25 | 40.32/2.20 | 384/6 | 64.00/2.49 |
Sachin Tendulkar | 1182/25 | 47.28/3.15 | 432/4 | 108.00/3.28 |
VVS Laxman | 1013/28 | 36.17/2.99 | 410/5 | 82.00/2.95 |
MS Dhoni | 659/24 | 27.45/3.31 | 282/3 | 94.00/3.44 |