If the opening day belonged to India's experienced batters, Day 2 was defined by Kranti Gaud's sensational spell before Smriti Mandhana once again underlined why she remains the backbone of India's batting line-up.
Kranti Gaud produces career-defining spell
England resumed the morning at 21/1, hoping to erase India's first-innings total of 285. Instead, they ran into an inspired Indian pace attack. Gaud struck early to remove Maia Bouchier before Sneh Rana broke a promising partnership by dismissing Amy Jones, whose brisk 52 off 62 balls was the lone bright spot in England's innings.
Once Jones departed, England's resistance quickly faded. Gaud relentlessly attacked the stumps, extracted movement off the Lord's surface and exposed the lower order with disciplined seam bowling. She finished with a memorable five-wicket haul, becoming the youngest Indian woman fast bowler to register a Test five-for, surpassing Jhulan Goswami's previous record.
Her spell also marked the first five-wicket haul by a pace bowler in a women's Test in England since Ellyse Perry's 6/32 in 2015, while England's 170 became their third-lowest first-innings total against India at home.
Mandhana and Shafali shut the door on England
Armed with a healthy first-innings lead, India resisted any temptation to chase quick runs. Instead, Smriti Mandhana and Shafali Verma batted with composure, blunting England's new-ball attack before steadily taking control.
The pair added 88 runs for the opening wicket, frustrating the hosts for nearly an entire session. In doing so, they registered their seventh 50-plus partnership in Women's Tests, the most by any pair in the history of the format, overtaking former Indian duo Sandhya Agarwal and Sudha Shah. Shafali looked fluent before falling for 33, attempting to take on Sophie Ecclestone, but her dismissal barely slowed India's progress.
Mandhana leads from the front again
Mandhana continued her outstanding Test with another assured innings, remaining unbeaten on 69 at stumps. The left-hander mixed patience with elegant strokeplay, rarely allowing England's bowlers to build any sustained pressure.
She then found another dependable partner in Yastika Bhatia, who compiled a calm 39 not out. Together, the duo added an unbeaten fifty-run stand to stretch India's lead well beyond 250 and leave England with little encouragement heading into Day 3.
India Eye Historic Victory at the Home of Cricket
With a 269-run lead, nine wickets still intact and six sessions remaining, India head into Day 3 firmly in command.
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