India may have lost the third Test at Lord’s by 22 runs, but Ravindra Jadeja’s performance stood tall. Quite literally. The left-hander’s unbeaten 61 off 181 balls was a lesson in defiance, grit, and calm amid chaos.
While the top order crumbled like dry biscuits under pressure, Jadeja held the fort with lower-order partners Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj, almost dragging India over the line. The scoreboard might say defeat, but for fans and teammates alike, Jadeja walked off like a winner.
“That fight from Jaddu was absolutely brilliant,” says Gambhir
It’s not often that a losing team dominates the headlines, but Jadeja managed just that. Gautam Gambhir, India’s new head coach, was visibly moved.
“That was an incredible fight,” Gambhir said in a video shared on the BCCI website. “The fight from Jaddu was absolutely brilliant.”
Simple words, but they carried weight. The Lord’s Test was less about numbers and more about resistance. Jadeja, coming in at No. 7 with India wobbling, played a knock that echoed old-school Test match values—patience, defence, and bloody-mindedness.
Ryan ten Doeschate, Gambhir’s deputy, went a step further. “His batting has reached another level. His consistency in the last two Tests and the calmness he brought to the dressing room is something else,” he said.
India’s top-order collapse left too much to do
The target looked gettable—193 on a surface that hadn’t turned treacherous yet. But England’s bowlers, especially Shoaib Bashir, kept things tight. India’s chase didn’t even last 75 overs.
The numbers were sobering:
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Top 8 wickets fell inside 40 overs
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India lost the match with 22 runs still to get
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Final score: 170 all out in 74.5 overs
Jadeja’s knock wasn’t flashy. It wasn’t filled with cover drives or lofted sixes. Instead, it was a grind. He soaked up 181 deliveries, holding on while partners fell around him.
Tailenders joined the resistance—briefly, but bravely
It’s not often Bumrah and Siraj’s batting makes headlines, but here, it mattered.
Bumrah faced 54 balls for his 5. Siraj, 30 deliveries for 4. Small scores, yes—but massive impact. Together with Jadeja, they consumed over 34 overs. That’s more than half a day of Test cricket. In an age where batting collapses can happen in one session, that’s saying something.
And that’s where the emotional punch comes in. For every fan watching, it wasn’t about runs anymore. It was about holding on. Jadeja played with the stubbornness of a street brawler. You could almost hear him saying: “Not today.”
Siraj’s tribute shows Jadeja’s value beyond numbers
Mohammed Siraj, not one for hyperbole, had just one line. But it said everything.
“It’s very difficult to get a player like him and we are lucky to have such a player in our team.”
That’s from a teammate who’s been in the trenches with Jadeja. His all-round value goes beyond stats. He bowls tight spells, saves runs in the field, and now—he finishes innings too.
And it’s not just this one knock. Over the last few seasons, his batting has matured. He’s not the dasher of old anymore. There’s control. There’s defence. There’s confidence.
Here’s a quick snapshot of Jadeja’s last three Test innings:
Match | Runs | Balls Faced | Batting Position | Result |
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Lord’s Test | 61* | 181 | No. 7 | Lost by 22 runs |
2nd Test | 45 | 87 | No. 6 | India won |
1st Test | 56 | 98 | No. 7 | India lost |
A loss that still inspired hope
The match is officially a loss. India now trails 1-2 in the five-Test series. But something shifted. Even in defeat, the tone was hopeful. This wasn’t a white-flag surrender. It was a backs-against-the-wall stand.
Jadeja’s innings was the kind fans remember long after scorecards fade. It reminded people why they watch Test cricket. Not for sixes or celebrations. But for moments when one man digs in, when he refuses to go down without a fight.
There was no crowd eruption when Jadeja reached fifty. Just quiet respect. A nod to the kind of cricket that doesn’t make highlight reels but leaves a mark.
What this means heading into the 4th Test
India has two more Tests to turn the series around. The batting needs fixing. The middle-order looks shaky. And the openers? They’re under pressure, big time.
But if there’s a silver lining, it’s Jadeja. His presence in the lower-middle order is like a safety net. If top batters don’t click, Jadeja’s there. Not just as a cleanup act—but as a batter who now carries the mindset of a top-order player.
Few takeaways heading into the next game:
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India’s tail isn’t a liability anymore
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Jadeja deserves a bump up the order
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England can’t take lower-order resistance for granted
And let’s be honest—if Jadeja can drag a crumbling lineup to within 22 runs, what happens when the top four actually fire?