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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Arshdeep Singh's career-best of 6 for 40 gives India D consolation win

Arshdeep Singh warms up ICC via Getty Images

India D 349 (Samson 106, Bhui 56, Saini 5-74) and 305 (Bhui 119*, Mukesh 4-98, Saini 3-58) beat India B 282 (Easwaran 116, Washington 87, Saurabh 5-73) and 115 (Nitish 40*, Arshdeep 6-40, Thakare 4-59) by 257 runs

Arshdeep Singh's first-class career-best of 6 for 40 helped deliver a consolation win for India D in the final round of the Duleep Trophy 2024-25, in Anantapur. Set 373 for victory in a little over two sessions, India B folded for 115 in just 22.2 overs, with Arshdeep and Vidarbha seamer Aditya Thakare, who got 4 for 59, picking up all ten wickets between them.

Arshdeep's strikes across both innings included the big one of Suryakumar Yadav, who only managed scores of 5 and 16 in his first first-class fixture in over a year. Left-arm seamer Arshdeep, who picked up only his second five-wicket haul in first-class cricket, finished with a match haul of 9 for 90.

India B's allrounder Nitish Kumar Reddy was the only batter to offer any semblance of resistance, remaining unbeaten on 40 when Arshdeep fittingly picked up the final wicket to clinch a 257-run victory before tea on the fourth and final day.

As well as Arshdeep contributed, it was batter Ricky Bhui who was named the Player of the Match. Bhui top-scored in the second innings with an unbeaten 119, going with 56 in the first, to swell the lead after India D found themselves in trouble at 18 for 3 in the second innings. Bhui, who began the day unbeaten on 90, completed his 20th first-class century quickly as India D added 59 more to their overnight 244 for 5 even as spin-bowling allrounder Saransh Jain didn't come out to bat due to an unspecified injury.

India B's hopes of going after the target needed a stable base from the top order, but that wasn't to be, as they quickly found themselves three down inside eight overs. Musheer Khan, who had opened the tournament with a backs-to-the-wall 181, was out for his second duck in four innings since, to end a tournament that had promised much more.

Nitish, who himself hadn't contributed as much as he would have liked with the bat, ended the tournament on a brighter note, albeit in a losing cause. He managed two wickets with the ball during the competition, where he showed the ability to bowl long spells and move the ball both ways at a brisk pace.

Full report to follow...