Bristol: Shafali Verma continued to amaze the cricketing world with her audacious strokeplay as she became only the fourth player in the history of women's Tests to two half centuries on debut, taking India to 83 for 1 at stumps on the third day of one-off Test against England.
Shafali Verma was batting on 55 not out off 68 balls in the Indian second innings when the day's play ended after the third session was washed out by rains. AP
The teenage prodigy was batting on 55 not out off 68 balls in the Indian second innings when the day's play ended after the third session was washed out by rains.
Another debutant Deepti Sharma, who was promoted to number three after her resolute 29 not out in the first innings, was giving Verma company on unbeaten 18 after India were forced to follow-on in the one-off Test.
Before Verma, Lesley Cooke (England), Jessica Louise Jonassen (Australia) and Vanessa Bowen (Sri Lanka) were the other players who have scored two 50-plus scores in their debut matches.
India trail by 82 runs overall with nine second innings wickets in hand and they still need to do a lot of work to save the match on the final day on Saturday.
Only 45.5 overs were possible on the day with three rain delays or interruptions. With the third interruption, the umpires called for tea and that was the end of the day's play as the final session could not be resumed due to incessant rain.
The class and talent of Verma was written all over in her innings, studded with 11 fours as the England bowlers had no clue how to deal with the youngster under cold and windy conditions.
The Indian opener mixed caution with aggression as she sent the loose balls to the fence while leaving out the good deliveries.
The Verma-Deepti duo defied the England bowlers for 20 overs and added 54 runs in the post-lunch session which started 30 minutes late due to rain. England toiled hard for the whole second session without any success.
The other opener Smriti Mandhana was dismissed in the morning session for eight, caught in the slips off Katherine Brunt's bowling.
Verma, who had hit 96 in her first innings, continued her impressive form as she hit six more boundaries in the second session.
Earlier, India Women were left with a mountain to climb after being shot out for 231 in their first innings, half an hour before lunch.
After a dramatic collapse on the second day on Thursday, India's batting woes continued as they lost five wickets for the addition of just 44 runs in 21.2 overs in the morning session, completely undoing the tremendous effort by Verma (96) and Mandhana (78).
Deepti (29 not out) and Pooja Vastrakar (12) put up a 33-run stand for the ninth wicket but could not save the team from following on in response to England's first innings total of 396 for nine declared.
Left-arm spinner Sophie Ecclestone (4/88) was the pick of the England bowlers with four wickets while pacers Katherine Brunt and Anya Shrubsole took the last two Indian wickets.
India scored their first run of the day after 20 balls and by then had lost two wickets, including the crucial one of vice captain Harmanpreet Kaur.
Harmanpreet was out after an England went for review in the second over of the day without adding anything to her overnight score of four. She was ruled leg before off Ecclestone.
Tanya Bhatia fell two overs later without disturbing the scorer after facing six balls. She too was dismissed by Ecclestone, who then accounted for Sneh Rana (2) with a turning delivery to reduce India to 197 for eight.
England took the new ball after 80 overs and the Indian first innings ended 1.2 overs after that with the dismissal of Pooja Vastrakar (12) and Jhulan Goswami (1).
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According to sources in the know of developments, Rahane, a Test specialist with 73 games and over 4500 runs under his belt, was requested by women's team head coach Ramesh Powar for a session, primarily with the batters before they left for England.
Ahead of the one-off Test that starts in Bristol on Wednesday, we take a look at all of the India women vs England women Tests:
"I lost my father two months back. When this team was announced, a little before that, I lost him. It was a bit difficult, it was an emotional moment because he wanted to see me play again for India," Rana said during the press conference that followed after day one's play on Wednesday.