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England vs India: Heather Knight and Tammy Beaumont fall cheaply as hosts face huge defeat

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@ 12/07/2026

England v India, one-off Test, Lord's (day three of four)

India 285 (Mandhana 83; Ecclestone 3-68) & 341-7 dec (Bhatia 113; Ecclestone 5-118)

England 170 (Jones 52; Gaud 5-37) & 130-6 (Jones 52*; Satghare 2-19)

England trail by 327 runs

Scorecard

England are facing a heavy defeat heading into the fourth and final day of the one-off women's Test against India at Lord's.

After India declared on 341-7 and set England a world record chase of 457, the hosts finished on 130-6, needing another 327 for victory.

There were no fairytale endings for the retiring Tammy Beaumont and Heather Knight, as the former was bowled for a golden duck and Knight fell for 13 to leave England in disarray.

Captain Nat Sciver-Brunt was also out cheaply, bowled sweeping for 11, and England slumped to 59-5 before Mady Villiers and Amy Jones resisted with a gritty sixth-wicket stand of 67.

Villiers' resistance was ended by Richa Ghosh's sensational catch at silly mid-off in the final 10 minutes of the day as India edged closer to a crushing win, despite Jones being unbeaten on 52.

The visitors' surely insurmountable lead was set up by Yastika Bhatia, who outshone her overnight batting partner Smriti Mandhana to become the first female Test centurion at Lord's with a majestic 113.

England's bowling improved in the morning session as Lauren Bell removed Mandhana for 70 and Jemimah Rodrigues was bowled for three, but any hopes of a miraculous comeback were decimated after lunch when Bell was off the field with abdominal soreness.

Bhatia feasted on Lauren Filer and Issy Wong's inability to target the stumps to bring up her first international hundred, before Ghosh's counter-attacking fifty hammered home their advantage for Harmanpreet Kaur to declare before tea.

Sophie Ecclestone finished with 5-118 to become the first Englishwoman on the Lord's Test honours board but that was a rare cause for celebration on another difficult day of Indian dominance.

England have been completely outplayed over the past two days in particular but it has been a week where the occasion has felt far more significant than the result, whichever way it went.

Day one saw past players honoured and thanked, and day three saw the final innings of two of England's finest batters who been at the forefront of the transition from amateur to fully professional.

It was a particularly brutal end for Beaumont, who received a standing ovation from the crowd as she made her way to the middle after hours spent under the sun in the field as India piled on the runs.

She could have few complaints about the dismissal though, a beauty from India quick Kranti Gaud's first ball which took off stump, which led to the unusual sight of a guard of honour for a golden duck but one that was deserved, regardless.

When Maia Bouchier was pinned lbw by one that kept a little low from Sayali Satghare, Knight and Sciver-Brunt were reunited with hopes of one last defiant partnership to keep England's slim chances alive but it was short-lived.

India's bowlers were not as consistently accurate as in the first innings but once again got their reward for bowling straight, a tactic that evaded England for much of the match.

When Alice Capsey was bowled to leave them 59-5, India had only bowled 29 balls in 19.3 overs that would have hit the stumps and five of them resulted in wickets.

Knight succumbed to the impressive Gaud, who has seven wickets in the match, which led to the second guard of honour in the space of an hour as England were quickly faced with reality - that life without two of their stalwarts is about to begin.

After Mandhana threw away the chance at a hundred with her 83 in the first innings, it felt inevitable in the conditions and with India in such a dominant position that she would be the one to carve her name into history and on the honours board.

Mandhana and Rodrigues are the superstars in India's line-up, but it was the understated brilliance of Bhatia who quietly went about her work and followed Gaud's efforts with the ball the previous day.

England have struggled to adapt to the conditions since Sciver-Brunt surprisingly made the call to bowl first, both with the slope and to India's stylish left-handers.

Bell picked up a couple of wickets as reward for her consistency but there is a concern about how little support she has from the rest of the seam attack. Wong and Filer were not needed during the World Cup and their struggles this week leave England with some question marks over their depth in the fast bowling department.

Bhatia eased through the nineties with help from Wong bowling wide outside off stump, needing just six balls to go from 91 to three figures with two gifted boundaries along the way, indicative of England's inability to build any pressure.

She was eventually caught slogging off Ecclestone but a bizarre passage of play followed where the hard-hitting Ghosh seemed unsure about whether to hit boundaries or turn down singles despite having a lead of more than 400 and England's bowlers being completely exhausted.

Once she had kicked on to a 52-ball fifty, Harmanpreet finally made the signal to put England out of their misery, albeit very fleetingly.