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"Moving Day." That is what the third day of a Test match is universally known as. It is the day where games accelerate, leads are built, or collapses dictate the ultimate outcome of the match.
As the sun broke through the scattered London clouds, bathing The Oval in a crisp, cool morning light, the atmosphere was electric. The Bharat Army was already in full voice, their chants beating a rhythmic, anticipatory pulse.
India had ended Day 2 in absolute command at 226/1, trailing Australia's 311 by just 85 runs. The swagger of Aarav Pathak and the elegance of Shubman Gill had completely deflated the Australian bowling attack the previous evening.
But mornings in England are notoriously deceptive.
Nasser Hussain: "Good morning and welcome to Day 3 of this World Test Championship Final. The equation is fascinating. India is in a dominant position, but Pat Cummins will know that the first hour this morning is absolutely critical. The ball is 60 overs old, but in these cool morning conditions, it will still swing. If Australia cannot find a breakthrough quickly, this game will run away from them by Lunch."
Ravi Shastri: "Spot on, Nasser. The first thirty minutes are a survival test. Shubman Gill and Aarav Pathak look relaxed as they walk down the pavilion steps, but they cannot afford to be complacent. You have to earn the right to dominate all over again."
Out in the middle, Pat Cummins gathered his team for a quick, intense huddle. He tossed the ball to his premier left-arm strike bowler, Mitchell Starc. Starc had been subjected to Aarav's brutal upper-cuts the previous evening. Today, he looked focused, rubbing the red Dukes ball vigorously on his trousers.
Over 61: Mitchell Starc to Shubman Gill
Shubman Gill took his guard, marking the crease. He was batting on 78, looking incredibly composed, his eyes set on a World Test Championship Final century.
Ball 1: Starc started his run-up. He steamed in from over the wicket, looking to test the batsman's footwork immediately. He bowled a full delivery, aiming for the pads, hoping for a hint of inswing. Gill didn't even need to sighter. His head fell perfectly over the ball, his wrists rolled smoothly, and he flicked the ball with effortless grace. The ball raced across the dew-kissed outfield, splitting the gap at deep square leg perfectly.
FOUR.
Matthew Hayden: "Oh, what a glorious way to start the morning! He hasn't even broken a sweat yet, and he's already caressing the ball to the boundary! Just a flick of the wrists. Starc strayed onto the pads, and Gill says, 'Thank you very much!'"
Ball 2: Starc grimaced, immediately correcting his line. He pulled his length back slightly, bowling in the channel just outside the off-stump, angling away. Gill watched it closely, lifted his bat high, and let it pass through to Alex Carey. Dot.
Ball 3: Starc went slightly wider, trying to tempt the drive. Gill, showing the maturity that had defined his innings so far, shouldered arms once again. He was perfectly content to leave the good balls. Dot.
Ravi Shastri: "Good discipline. He got his boundary, and now he is just feeling the pace of the pitch. Starc is bending his back, trying to get some life out of this 60-over-old ball."
Ball 4: Mitchell Starc walked back to his mark. He wiped his brow. He knew that bowling outside off wasn't troubling Gill. He needed to plant a seed of doubt.
He ran in hard, going slightly wider on the crease to create an angle. He hit the deck hard. It was a back-of-a-length delivery.
Gill, seeing the line outside his off-stump and the extra bounce, instinctively decided to leave it alone. He lifted his bat, dropping his hands to let the ball sail safely over the stumps.
But Starc had produced a moment of absolute, unplayable magic. The ball hit the seam and didn't just hold its line. It jagged back in. Violently.
Because of the high bounce, Gill thought it was sailing over the bails. But the wicked late inswing brought the ball crashing back into the stumps at a terrifying trajectory.
Gill, his bat raised in a leave, could only watch in sheer horror as the ball kissed the very top of his off and middle stumps, dislodging the heavy wooden bails.
CRASH.
Nasser Hussain (Screaming in the comm box): "HE HAS LEFT IT! HE HAS LEFT IT AND HE IS BOWLED! OH, MITCHELL STARC, YOU ABSOLUTE GENIUS! What a delivery! It bounced high, it swung in late, and Shubman Gill has shouldered arms to his own demise! Australia have the breakthrough they were desperately praying for!"
Ravi Shastri: "I do not believe it! That is an absolute jaffa! Gill thought it was bouncing over the stumps, but the late tail inward was lethal! The rhythm is completely broken! A massive, massive wicket for the Australians in the first ten minutes of the day!"
The Australian team went completely berserk. Starc let out a primal roar, pumping his fists as Pat Cummins and Steve Smith sprinted over to mob him.
Shubman Gill stood frozen at the crease for a long, painful second. He looked back at his shattered stumps, let out a deep, frustrated sigh, and tucked his bat under his arm. He had batted flawlessly for 82 runs, but Test cricket had just delivered a brutal reminder of its unforgiving nature.
Shubman Gill b Starc 82 (144)Score: India 230/2
The sudden, shocking fall of the wicket silenced the Bharat Army for exactly five seconds. But as the giant LED screen at The Oval flashed the name of the next batsman, the silence morphed into a deafening, terrifying roar.
VIRAT KOHLI.
The Indian Captain, the undisputed King of cricket, walked down the pavilion steps. His eyes were hidden behind his helmet grill, but his body language was a mixture of supreme confidence and aggressive intent. He aggressively twirled his bat as he marched to the center.
Matthew Hayden: "Listen to this reception! The fall of Gill is a blow, but out walks the man who relishes these exact situations. Virat Kohli. He loves batting in England, and he loves a battle against Mitchell Starc. The pressure is instantly back on the bowlers."
Kohli crossed paths with Aarav Pathak, who was standing quietly at the non-striker's end, leaning on his bat. Aarav tapped Kohli's glove. "It's nipping back in, Virat bhai," Aarav warned him softly. "That one jumped off a length." "I saw," Kohli nodded. "Let's grind him down."
Kohli took his guard. He crouched low, his eyes locked onto Starc.
Ball 5: Starc, his tail firmly up, steamed in to the Indian captain. He bowled a fast, full delivery, shaping away towards the slips. Kohli, with eyes like a hawk, watched it all the way and decisively shouldered arms, letting it carry to Carey. Dot.
Ball 6: Starc tried to repeat the magic ball. Back of a length, angling in. Kohli was ready. He didn't leave it. He stayed compact, rising on his toes, and presented a dead-straight defensive bat, smothering the bounce perfectly. The ball dropped harmlessly at his feet. Dot.
End of Over 61.Score: India 230/2. Runs from Over: 4 runs and 1 massive wicket.
Nasser Hussain: "What an incredible start to moving day! A boundary, a brilliant wicket, and the arrival of Virat Kohli. Starc has his tail up, but the Indian captain looks completely unbothered. We are in for a sensational session of Test match cricket!"
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The pitch was no longer the flat highway of the previous afternoon. As Day 3 progressed, the abrasive surface began to act like sandpaper on the red Dukes ball. Small, jagged cracks were opening up near the good-length areas. Every time Mitchell Starc or Pat Cummins hit the deck, a small puff of red dust exploded, signaling that variable bounce and sharp turn were now active participants in the final.
Nasser Hussain: "This is as tough as it gets. The ball is starting to reverse swing, the bounce is getting variable some staying low, others spitting up and you have the two best batters in the world trying to navigate it. It's a gladiatorial contest."
Ravi Shastri: "And look at the body language of the Aarav. He's been out there since yesterday, he's seen his partner go, but he hasn't moved a muscle in his concentration. He's looking at the cracks, and he's telling the Aussies: 'You'll have to attack me to get me out of here.'"
As the clock ticked toward the Lunch break, the tension reached a breaking point. Aarav Pathak was on 96. Scott Boland was brought on to dry up the runs.
Over 78: Scott Boland to Aarav Pathak
Ball 1: Boland hits the top of off. Aarav defends with a dead bat.
Ball 2: A tight line. Aarav pushes to point. No run.
Ball 3: Boland tries the nip-backer. Aarav clips it softly to mid-on.
The crowd was on its feet. The Indian dugout was leaning over the railing. Rohit Sharma was standing, cap in hand, waiting.
Ball 4: Boland went full and wide, tempting the drive. Aarav didn't chase it with hard hands. He leaned into it with the elegance of a veteran, opening the face of his bat at the very last microsecond. The ball sliced between point and cover, racing across the lightning-fast outfield.
FOUR!
Ravi Shastri (SCREAMING AT THE TOP OF HIS LUNGS): "THERE IT IS! HUNDRED FOR AARAV PATHAK! IN THE WORLD TEST CHAMPIONSHIP FINAL! HE HAS DONE IT AGAIN! HE TREATS FINALS LIKE A WALK IN THE PARK! THE OVAL IS BOWING TO THE PRINCE! THREE WTC FINAL INNINGS, THREE CENTURIES! IS THIS MAN EVEN REAL?!"
Aarav took off his helmet. He didn't roar. He didn't celebrate wildly. He simply raised his bat to the three corners of the ground and then bowed deeply to the Indian dressing room. It was a gesture of supreme confidence and respect.
Ian Bishop: "Think about this record, folks. This is Aarav Pathak's third innings in a World Test Championship Final.
2021 Final (1st Innings): 100+
2021 Final (2nd Innings): 200+
2023 Final (1st Innings): 100* (and counting). He has scored a century in every single innings he has played in the WTC Finals. He is the ultimate big-game player."
As Aarav put his helmet back on, a graphic appeared on the global broadcast that made the commentators fall silent for a moment. It was the comparison the world had been whispering about, now laid bare.
{I hope these are his correct stats, I am praying 😭🙏. If not, you could correct me!}
(Aarav and Don Bradman stats after 36 innings)
Aarav Pathak-Matches: 22Innings: 36Runs: 3,235Batting Average: 101.09Centuries: 16Half-Centuries: 15Wickets: 107
Don Bradman-Innings: 36Runs: 2,927Batting Average: 99.93Centuries: 13Half-Centuries: 7Wickets: 2
Nasser Hussain (Voice filled with genuine awe): "Look at those numbers on your screen. We always said no one would ever touch Bradman. We said his average of 99.94 was the 'unreachable summit'. But look at Aarav Pathak. After 36 Tests innings, he has more runs, a higher average, and more centuries than the Don himself. We are witnessing the greatest statistical start to a career in the history of human sport."
Ricky Ponting: "And Nasser, that's only half the story! Bradman was a pure batter. Aarav Pathak has 107 Test wickets. That is an average of 4.86 wickets per match. He is taking five wickets a game while averaging over 100 with the bat. That's not a player; that's a cheat code."
With the century out of the way, the intensity didn't drop; it shifted. Aarav and Virat Kohli began a clinic in "running the opposition into the ground."
At the MCG against Pakistan, they were fast. At The Oval, they were telepathic. They realized the Australian fielders were playing deeper to prevent the boundaries, so they began to exploit the large outfield.
Over 82: Mitchell Starc to Virat Kohli
Ball 2: Kohli tapped a length ball softly into the vacant mid-off region. It was a push of barely five yards. "YES! PUSH! PUSH!" Kohli screamed. Aarav was already halfway down the pitch before the ball stopped rolling. Pat Cummins chased it from mid-on, but the pair turned like Olympic sprinters. 2 Runs.
Ball 4: Aarav on strike. He worked a reverse-swinging delivery to deep square leg. It was a simple single for anyone else. "TWO! COME BACK FOR TWO!" Aarav roared. They sprinted the second run with such speed that Mitchell Starc's throw from the boundary arrived just as Aarav was already grounding his bat. 2 Runs.
Ravi Shastri: "Look at them! They are turning simple ones into twos and easy twos into threes! They are running like cheetahs on a hunt! It is cardiovascular warfare. The Australians are looking at the sky, they are looking at the clock—they are physically exhausted just watching these two run!"
Matthew Hayden: "It's soul-crushing for a bowler. You bowl a good ball, the batter defends it softly, and they steal a run. You bowl a better ball, they squeeze it into a gap and run two. You can see Pat Cummins is frustrated. The fielders are constantly on the move, and it's creating gaps for the boundaries."
The coordination was flawless. If Aarav took a risky stride, Kohli was already backing him up. If Kohli looked to sweep, Aarav was shouting instructions about the fielder's movement. It was a partnership of the "King" and the "Prince," and they were in a total flow state.
Over 85: Nathan Lyon to Aarav Pathak
Lyon tried to use the rough outside the off-stump. Aarav, batting on 104, decided to disrupt his length. He didn't slog. He played a high-risk, high-reward inside-out drive. He stepped out, got to the pitch, and lofted Lyon with the turn over extra cover. FOUR.
The very next ball, Lyon darted it in quicker. Aarav stayed back and played it late, right under his eyes, steering it through the gap between slip and point. "Go for two!" Kohli yelled. They completed the double comfortably.
Harsha Bhogle: "Aarav is manipulating the field like a grandmaster on a chessboard. He hits a four, then takes a double. He is never stationary. He is forcing Australia to change their plans every three balls."
The final fifteen minutes before the break saw India assert total dominance. Virat Kohli found his touch, hitting Nathan Lyon for a delicate late-cut that teased the slip cordon and raced to the rope.
The Australian bowlers looked demoralized. Pat Cummins had tried six different bowling changes in the session, but the Aarav-Kohli wall was impenetrable. The variable bounce that had troubled the openers was being handled with soft hands and elite footwork.
Mitchell Starc ran in for the final delivery before Lunch. He bowled a 149 kmph yorker that started wide and reversed back in viciously. Aarav Pathak, with the coolness of a monk, simply jammed his bat down, squeezed it into the gap at mid-wicket for a single to retain the strike for the next session, and started walking toward the pavilion before the ball even reached the fielder.
LUNCH - DAY 3Score: India 318/2 (88 Overs) Lead: 7 Runs (Australia 311 All Out) Partnership: 88* runs.
Aarav Pathak: 108* (155 balls)
Virat Kohli: 41* (78 balls)
Harsha Bhogle: "A session that belonged to one man and his pursuit of immortality. India has scored 318 runs for the loss of just Shubman Gill today. They lead Australia by 7 runs now, and they have 8 wickets in hand. With the King and the Prince set, India is not just defending the Mace; they are preparing to own it."
Ravi Shastri: "7 runs lead, but in reality, the lead is psychological. Australia looks broken. They've seen the stats, they've seen the 'Falcon' bowler, and now they've seen the 'Bradman' batter. You don't stop a man like Aarav Pathak. You just hope he gets bored and gives you a wicket."
As the players walked into the tunnel, Aarav walked side-by-side with Kohli, the two of them in deep conversation. The Oval was buzzing with the realization that they weren't just watching a match; they were witnessing the era of the undisputed King of Cricket.
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The forty-minute lunch break had done nothing to cool the humid London air, nor had it dampened the spirits of the Bharat Army, who were now chanting the Vice-Captain's name with a rhythmic, thunderous intensity.
Nasser Hussain: "Welcome back. India leads by 7. The strategy for Australia is clear: they have to use this brand-new ball, which is still relatively fresh, to find a way past Aarav Pathak. If they don't strike in the next hour, this game is gone. Pat Cummins has the ball. Virat Kohli on strike."
Aarav Pathak, having reached his third consecutive WTC Final century, decided that survival was no longer enough. The mandate from the dressing room was to pile on the lead as quickly as possible.
Over: Mitchell Starc to Aarav Pathak Starc ran in, aiming for the toes with a 147 kmph yorker. Aarav didn't just dig it out. He made a late adjustment, opened the face of the bat, and used Starc's own velocity to guide the ball past the diving short-third man. FOUR.
Ball 4: Starc banged it in short. Aarav swiveled. It wasn't a standard pull; it was a flat-batted slap over mid-wicket. SIX. The ball cleared the rope by a mile. Aarav moved to 118.
Over: Nathan Lyon to Aarav Pathak Lyon tried to exploit the rough. Aarav danced down the track. He didn't loft it; he hit it with such force along the ground that the long-on fielder didn't even move. FOUR. Next ball, he played an audacious reverse-sweep. Against the spin. FOUR. Aarav was scoring at will. He moved to 127.
Over: Pat Cummins to Aarav Pathak Cummins tried to cramp him for room. Aarav backed away, created a massive arc, and sliced a 150 kmph delivery over the point fielder. FOUR. The run rate in the last five overs was hovering at nearly 9 runs per over. In Test cricket. Against Australia.
Over : Scott Boland to Aarav Pathak
Ball 5: Aarav tapped a length ball to cover and sprinted for a single. 150 UP FOR AARAV PATHAK!
Ravi Shastri (SCREAMING): "ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY! THE PRINCE HAS CONQUERED THE OVAL! It has taken him no time at all! From 100 to 150 in just 30 balls! He is dismantling the Australian bowling attack brick by brick! Look at the dugout! The King is applauding the Prince!"
Aarav didn't even take off his helmet. He just raised his bat, wiped the sweat from his eyes, an signaled for a new pair of gloves. He was on 150 off 185 balls.
Ricky Ponting: "This is absolute carnage. Aarav Pathak is playing with the field. He knows exactly where Cummins wants him to hit, and he's hitting it elsewhere. He's taken 42 runs in just 5 overs since lunch. He's moved from 108 to 150 in the blink of an eye!"
The onslaught had left Pat Cummins looking dejected. He turned to his most disciplined athlete and young bowler for a chance again with the last over for the old ball, Cameron Green, to try and break the rhythm. After this, Cummins would take the new ball.
Over 96: Cameron Green to Aarav Pathak
Green, with his massive height, was extracting extra bounce.
Ball 4: Aarav was batting on 158. He had hit two boundaries in the previous over off Boland. He was looking to clear the boundary again to reach 160+.
Green ran in and bowled a beautifully disguised slower-ball bouncer. It sat up in the surface, losing its pace just as it reached the hitting zone.
Aarav, anticipating another 140 kmph thunderbolt, committed to the pull shot a fraction too early. The ball hit the top half of the bat, losing all its momentum. It soared high, high into the London sky, swirling towards the deep mid-wicket boundary.
Mitchell Starc was patrolling the rope. He ran ten yards to his right, kept his eyes glued to the red leather, and plucked it out of the air just inches inside the boundary padding.
Michael Atherton: "CAUGHT! He's got him! The breakthrough finally comes for Australia! Cameron Green outsmarts the set batsman with a slower one. Aarav Pathak goes for the big one, but it wasn't far enough! The sensational, breathtaking innings of the Vice-Captain ends at 158."
Ravi Shastri: "Listen to the Oval. They are standing. Every single person, Indian, Australian, English, is on their feet. 158 runs of pure gold. He has put India in a position where they cannot lose this Test match. The Prince has done his duty!"
Aarav Pathak c Starc b Green 158 Score: India 382/3 | Lead: 71 runs
As Aarav walked back, he crossed paths with Ajinkya Rahane. Rahane was making a comeback to the Test side, and the pressure was on.
Aarav tapped Rahane's shoulder. "The pitch is holding a bit, Jinks. Play late." Rahane nodded, his face a mask of calm.
For the next two hours, the "King" and the "Technician" built a monument. Virat Kohli, sensing the loss of his partner, took over the role of the aggressor. He brought up his own 50 off 92 balls with a magnificent flick off his pads.
Rahane, at the other end, was a study in patience. He played the late-cut off Lyon and the cover drive off Starc, slowly building his confidence.
Over 105: Mitchell Starc to Ajinkya Rahane
Rahane leaned into a half-volley. FOUR. That boundary brought up his half-century on comeback.
Harsha Bhogle: "Ajinkya Rahane, back in India whites, back in the runs! 50 for the veteran! He has supported Kohli perfectly here. The partnership is now worth 80 runs."
But the partnership ended shortly after Tea. Rahane, looking to guide a ball from Cummins, was caught by a spectacular diving catch from Steve Smith at second slip.
Ajinkya Rahane c Smith b Cummins 52 Score: India 462/4 | Lead: 151 runs
KL Rahul walked in. The debate about his place was still fresh, and he had a point to prove.
Kohli and Rahul added 45 runs in a quick burst. Kohli was now in the 90s, approaching a historic WTC Final ton. Rahul, however, fell to a sharp-turning delivery from Nathan Lyon, caught at short-leg.
KL Rahul c Labuschagne b Lyon 29 (42)Score: India 488/5
Ravindra Jadeja followed. The "Rockstar" didn't hang around. He smashed two boundaries off Boland and a towering six off Lyon before being trapped LBW by a reversing delivery from Starc.
Ravindra Jadeja lbw b Starc 31 (28)Score: India 512/6 | Lead: 201 runs
While the wickets fell at the other end, Virat Kohli remained an island of tranquility. He was now on 99. The entire stadium was silent as Pat Cummins ran in.
Over 122: Pat Cummins to Virat Kohli
Cummins bowled a full delivery outside off. Kohli didn't chase it. He leaned forward and played a controlled, wristy punch through the covers. He ran one. He turned for two. He didn't need the second. The ball hit the rope.
Ravi Shastri (Roaring): "CENTURY FOR THE KING! VIRAT KOHLI RECLAIMS HIS THRONE AT THE OVAL! A magnificent, gritty, and masterful hundred in the World Test Championship Final! He has seen partners come and go, but he stands tall! Look at the celebration! The King bows to the fans, and the fans bow to the King!"
Kohli took off his helmet, a serene smile on his face. He didn't roar in anger today; he smiled in satisfaction. He had anchored the innings to a lead of over 200.
With the lead at 210, Kohli decided to shield the tail but encouraged them to swing.
Shardul Thakur came and played a 'Lordly' cameo. He hit two fours off Green before being caught behind. Shardul Thakur c Carey b Green 14 (12)
Umesh Yadav lasted only 5 balls, cleaned up by a Starc yorker. Umesh Yadav b Starc 2 (5)
Then came Mohammed Shami. Shami, as is his ritual, decided to entertain. He didn't look at the field. He just swung. Ball 1: Smashed Starc over mid-on for FOUR. Ball 2: Slogged over mid-wicket for SIX. Kohli was laughing at the non-striker's end, watching Shami treat the WTC Final like a gully cricket match.
Shami fell trying a third consecutive boundary, caught at long-off. Mohammed Shami c Warner b Lyon 18 (10)Score: India 548/9 | Lead: 237 runs
The sun was low. The shadows of the pavilion were stretching across the square. Mohammed Siraj walked out as the final man.
Virat Kohli was now on 142*. He began to farm the strike, refusing singles on the first four balls of every over and looking for the boundary on the last.
Siraj, showing immense heart, survived an entire over from Pat Cummins, including two hostile bouncers that hit him on the shoulder. He didn't flinch.
Over 136: Mitchell Starc to Mohammed Siraj
The score was 551. The lead was 240. Kohli had just hit a boundary on the 4th ball of the previous over.
Starc ran in. He was bowling his 36th over of the innings. He was exhausted. He bowled a searing, 146 kmph inswinging yorker.
Siraj, who had been defending so well, finally faltered. He was a fraction late in getting his bat down. The ball snaked under the toe of his bat and crashed into the base of the middle stump.
Nasser Hussain: "BOWLED HIM! The resistance finally ends! Mitchell Starc cleans up Siraj, and that is the end of the Indian first innings! India has been bowled out for a gargantuan 551!"
Ravi Shastri: "What a day! What a performance! India lead by 240 runs! They have batted Australia out of this match! But look at the man walking off right now. Virat Kohli. 151 not out"
Final Score: India 551 All Out. Virat Kohli: 151*.
Stumps, Day 3
As the bails were removed, the Indian team walked off to a hero's welcome. They had scored 551 runs. They had a lead of 240. They had two days left to bowl Australia out.
Virat Kohli walked off last, holding his bat high. He had played the anchor to Aarav's fire, the stabilizer to Rahane's grit, and the general to the tail's defiance.
Nasser Hussain: "If you asked India on Day 1 what they wanted, they would have said exactly this. 551 on the board. A 240-run lead. Aarav Pathak's 158 and Virat Kohli's 151* have effectively secured the Mace for India. Australia is staring at an impossible task tomorrow morning."
Ricky Ponting: "It's been a clinical demolition. The Australian bowlers are spent. They've bowled 146 overs in this heat. They have to go out tomorrow and face Shami, Siraj, and the man of the hour, Aarav Pathak, with a 240-run deficit. I don't see them surviving."
The sun set over Kennington. The Oval was quiet, but the Indian dressing room was buzzing. The Mace was only ten wickets away.
Innings Summary:
Aarav Pathak: 158
Virat Kohli: 151*
Shubman Gill: 82
Ajinkya Rahane: 52
India First Innings: 551 All OutLead: 240 Runs.
STUMPS - DAY 3
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