Shoaib Bashir: 'On that wicket, anything is possible'
Written by I Dig SportsBashir bowled a marathon 44 overs in India's first innings in claiming final figures of 5 for 119. That included a 31-over unbroken spell on the second afternoon, in which he claimed the first four of his wickets, and he completed his five-for on the third morning when Akash Deep fell lbw for 9.
However, India had already seized the initiative by then, thanks to a key stand of 76 between Kuldeep Yadav and Dhruv Jurel, who top-scored with 90 from 149 balls as an overnight deficit of 134 was reduced to a far more manageable 46.
India's own spinners then cemented their dominance of the day by ripping through England's second innings to bowl them out for 145, with R Ashwin and Kuldeep Yadav sharing nine wickets between them. Bashir was back with ball in hand by the close, serving up a solitary over as Rohit Sharma and Yashasvi Jaiswal picked off 40 untroubled runs from their victory target of 192.
Despite a tough day for his team, Bashir recognises - even at the age of 20 and in his second Test - that he will have to play another key role on the fourth day if England are to have any hope of clawing back the ascendancy, and going to Dharamsala next week with the series locked at 2-2.
"Yeah, look, we would have liked to have got one or two wickets in that last period, but me and Harts [Tom Hartley] know we got a job to the tomorrow," he told TNT at the close. "Ten opportunities to take ten wickets, and on that wicket anything is possible."
"Me and Tommy are really excited for the challenge. We saw how Ashwin and [Ravindra] Jadeja bowled on that wicket and we take huge confidence from that. I used to watch these guys when I was a bit younger and they're world-class spinners. We know us two lads are up against a world-class attack but we've got a chance to be heroes."
Irrespective of the result, Bashir acknowledged that his rise to prominence was "surreal", given that he had played just six first-class fixtures in his entire professional career before his debut in Visakhapatnam, and was only recently playing national county cricket with Berkshire and club cricket in Guildford after being released by Surrey prior to his current stint with Somerset.
"It was a very special moment on my journey," he said of his fifth wicket. "Two years ago, I wouldn't have thought anything like this [would happen] but that was really special.
"I just want to dedicate this to my two late granddads who passed away a year and a bit ago," he added. "They used to watch Test cricket all the time on TV, sitting in front of the TV on the couch. And their wish was to watch me play, and that didn't happen. So yeah, it was quite emotional, but I'm grateful."
Despite his rapid rise, Bashir insisted he had not once felt out of place in an England dressing-room that includes one player, James Anderson, who made his Test debut before he was born, and several others - Joe Root, Ben Stokes and Jonny Bairstow among them - who have been fixtures of the Test side for more than a decade.
"I used to see these guys when I was a little kid," Bashir said. "So to be in that dressing-room, they give you so much confidence. Stokesy and the lads are brilliant, even if that's to go out to bat as well. It just gets the best out of you, and it's just a wonderful group to be a part of.
"The boys were up for it and we're really excited for tomorrow because it could bring a lot of joy. The mood is really good."
Asked if England still believed they could win, Bashir replied: "Massively. Me and Tommy are really excited for tomorrow. That pitch is deteriorating quite a bit now. We saw some pop from a good length and some roll. That's good signs for us and we're really excited.
"We're two tall spinners and we have tall release points. Stokesy and Baz picked us for a reason. We've just got to go out tomorrow and hopefully win a Test match."