Updates, analysis and colour from the first day of the fourth Test

Alan Gardner04-Mar-2021*Most recent entry will appear at the top, please refresh your page for the latest updates. All times are localEngland fought the conditions, a well-tuned India attack, and the internal momentum of their own fading batting fortunes to try and stay in contention on the first day of the fourth Test in Ahmedabad. The best that could be said of England’s total of 205 was that it was more than they had achieved across two innings on the same ground last week; the worst, that there is no team more adept than India at making such hard graft look inadequate.Having won the toss and chosen to bat, there was no doubt that England had left runs on the table. Only Ben Stokes managed to fashion a half-century, and the highest partnership of the innings was 48. Since piling up 578 in benign conditions at the outset of the series in Chennai, England’s batsmen have yet to produce another fifty stand.Arguably things could have been worse. With Axar Patel continuing his fine debut series by claiming four more wickets – taking his tally to 22 at 10.81 – and Joe Root falling cheaply to the bristling Mohammed Siraj early in the day, England’s middle and lower order, strengthened by the presence of the recalled Dan Lawrence at No. 7, staved off complete collapse. James Anderson then struck with his third ball, Shubman Gill trapped lbw, to ensure that India had to plot a watchful course through to the close.4.40pm: Immaculate AndersonHard to fault Anderson’s new-ball spell, with figures of 5-5-0-1. It’s been a typically masterful effort, with perfect lines in the off-stump channel and good lengths.It’s been a slightly less tidy start for Jack Leach, with Cheteshwar Pujara – whom he has dismissed three times in the series – using his feet to throw him off his plans, but Leach will not be overly worried just yet.