
Indian players celebrate the release of England Ben Ducketta, leave, during the fourth day of the third cricket match between England and India at Lord in cricket land in London, Sunday, July 13, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Pelham) Manchester: After the youth test between the India U-19 and England U-19 ended last week at Kent County Ground in Beckenham, the curator was asked if the Indian test team asked for some special types of playgrounds planned two days later. “It was a long summer and a lot of cricket was played. Even if they ask for something, I won’t be able to give them them,” the curator said, while the dust came out when he cleaned the center square.The locals here call it a beautiful summer. The last two grim and rainy days aside, the sun ran.The weather here is not the only point of speaking this summer. Games with high scores and the permanently flat nature of the playgrounds are a deviation from how cricket is usually played here. India Pacer Akash Deep, on his first tour of England, represented an amazing seam and a swing. This bubble burst in the first India ‘and’ the game he played before the test series.Before the start of the series, the CEO of the English team Rob Key pointed out that the growing amount of cricket has been played in playgrounds over the years. “There are a lot of tired squares. They have more cricket than ever when there is a hundred and female cricket in each region,” Key analyzed.
Rishabh Pant fought pain, worked hard on networks on 2 days to make a bat at Lord’s | Exclusive visual network Nets
As the series continued until the third Lord’s test, the playground lost a decent amount of zipper. In Edgbaston, Captain England Ben Stokes even said that the conditions resembled a subcontinent. The former Captain of England Andrew Strauss also leaned on the story. “With cloudy coverage and a little more moisture on the surfaces you get a little more vivid grass. That’s why it will be a little more swing.The role also plays access to the launch of the basball era. Another former English captain Michael Vaughan caused this point during the chat with Toi. “To play this style of cricket (attacking the launch), if you play on the green peaks, they will go quickly. I would think England wanted to play on the flatter goals to play a large brand of cricket,” Vaughan calculated.Former Indian goalkeeper Deep Dasgupta, who was a broadcast here, pointed out that the ground land is trying to maintain moisture after all land was based on sand to improve drainage. “Several ground staff told me that all rainwater was released so fast that the surface would dry up rapidly. In fact, the ground Stabic in Birmingham had to give cardboard leaves except the main square to remain humid longer,” Dasgupta Toi said.