If you have been following the england cricket team vs india national cricket team match scorecard from The Oval this summer, you’d know it was one of those Tests that don’t lend themselves to summaries. Played at Kennington Oval, London, from July 31 to Aug. 4, 2025, this fifth and final Test left England needing 374 for victory — which it fell six runs short of making, bowled out for — you guessed it —367. It was a tiny margin by which India pulled off the match, and with it the five-match series full of high-quality cricket ended in a draw: 2-2.
Match Result at a Glance
| Detail | Info |
| Match | England vs India, 5th Test |
| Venue | Kennington Oval, London |
| Dates | July 31 – August 4, 2025 |
| Toss | England won; elected to field |
| Result | India won by 6 runs |
| Series Result | 5-match series drawn 2-2 |
| Player of the Match | Mohammed Siraj |
| India totals | 224 & 396 |
| England totals | 247 & 367 |
Scorecard — 10th ICC World Cup 2023 – India National Cricket Team vs England Cricket Team
India 1st Innings — 224 All Out (69.4 overs)
England won the toss and inserted India, which for most of the first day looked like the right decision. The top order in India offered minimal resistance, with wickets falling at 10, 38 and 83. But it was Karun Nair who kept the innings afloat, grinding out a patient 57 off 109 balls, and then Washington Sundar (26) and Sai Sudharsan (38) adding more lower-order grit. Nair and Sundar were batting when India ended Day 1 on 204/6 before being bowled out for 224 the next morning.
The pick of England’s bowlers was Gus Atkinson whose stunning figures of 5/33 in 21.4 overs — an economy rate of 1.52 — kept India constantly under pressure. A useful contribution from Tongue, who took 3/57. A subplot of note: India’s extras (38 including 16 wides) returned some of those lost runs.
England 1st Innings — 247 All Out (51.2 overs)
England responded quickly, scoring 247 in just over 51 overs — a first-innings lead of 23. Zak Crawley led from the front with a typically busy 64 off 57 balls, Harry Brook made a useful contribution of 53 and Ben Duckett added 43. Joe Root chipped in with 29. England batted with a certain freedom, but was unable to set England a target that engendered real fear.
India’s bowlers kept coming. Mohammed Siraj had 4/86 and Prasidh Krishna 4/62, the two of them splitting eight out of ten wickets. England’s lead was palpable, but it wasn’t the kind of cushion that decides a Test match.
India 2nd Innings — 396 All Out (88 overs)
It was this innings that changed everything. Yashasvi Jaiswal played an innings of genuine authority, scoring 118 off 164 deliveries — — in the second half (16 fours, 2 sixes) — and getting to his half-century off a mere 44 deliveries before moving on to three figures in 127. A 100-run third-wicket partnership laid the platform for India as they move on from a wobbly overnight score of 15/2 at the end of Day 2.
The lower order then put boot to accelerator. All the bowlers bowled well, but Akash Deep — better known with the ball than bat in hand —produced an extraordinary 66 off 94 balls, while both Ravindra Jadeja (53) and Washington Sundar (53 off just 46 balls, with four sixes) swung the match back firmly in favour of India. India made 396 to set England a target of 374.
Josh Tongue toiled for 5/125 and Gus Atkinson collected 3/127 but India’s lower-middle order proved far too much.
England 2nd Innings — 367 All Out (85.1 overs), Chase:374
This was the crux of the match — a chase that strayed from impossible to inevitable to heartbreaking in 85 overs. Ben Duckett gave early impetus with 54, before the game swung on the partnership between Joe Root and Harry Brook. They added 195 for the fourth wicket to take England from 106/3 to 301/4, putting the home fans in belief.
Brook’s 111 from 98 balls — explosive, intent-filled — was broken when he was caught off Akash Deep by Siraj at 301. That brought the momentum crashing back to India. Root, who fluidly played a beautiful innings of 105 off 152 balls, kept England’s hopes alive until his wicket at 337/6 when he was caught low by Dhruv Jurel from Prasidh Krishna. From 337/6, England required still 37 from their last four wickets — and they could only muster 30.
In the second innings, Mohammed Siraj took 5/104 while Prasidh Krishna captured 4/126. India kept their nerve when it mattered most.
Star Players Who Helped Build the Scorecard
Only Mohammed Siraj truly came to the party in either innings, so it is no surprise that he took home the Player of the Match award. He finished with match figures of 4/86 and 5/104 — he provided the attack to key moments in both England innings, a continual examination for the lower and middle order.
Yashasvi Jaiswal’s 118 set up India’s second innings. Without the hundred, potentially never was the target they set England threatening enough to defend. The way he could change gears — slow at first, then fast — demonstrated real match intelligence.
Harry Brook (111 and 53) and Joe Root’s (105) were the magnificent men of England. With one partnership in the second innings they came close to completing a famous chase. Brook’s dismissal at 301/4 will be the one England fans replay for a while.
Among supporting acts, Akash Deep’s 66 with the bat was one of the innings of the match while Prasidh Krishna’s two four-wicket hauls — 4/62 and 4/126 — labelled him India’s most reliable weapon across the game.
Turning Points and Defining Moments
Test matches rarely hinge on one moment — they build. But there are a couple crucial passages here. India’s first-innings collapse for 224 had given the initiative to England yet Atkinson, dominant though her figures of 5/33 were, was ultimately not enough at a ground where totals tended to grow as the match developed.
India’s second innings reset everything. Jaiswal’s century, and the tail-wagging contributions from Jadeja, Sundar and Akash Deep turned the pressure back on England in a way that 224 never did.
The Brook-Root stand at 301/4 was the fulcrum in the chase If it had gone on, England would have taken the win. When Brook cut to gully with India’s target still 73 runs away, the momentum shifted markedly. Root’s catching-out at 337/6, with 37 still required and only four wickets left, was essentially the match. England managed 30 more. India needed them to come up six short — and they did.
Why This Scorecard Matters?
A gap of six runs makes this one of the closer Test finishes you’ll come across. But what adds an additional layer to this typgraphically-bulgarised england cricket team vs india national cricket team match scorecard is the narrative it sacrificed itself to create: a bowler’s day on opening day, two different kinds of hundreds in England’s chase, a debut-level tail contribution from a paceman and a seamer who worked his way into match standings (awards?) over four days of Test cricket.
His result also resonated beyond The Oval. If England had won, the series would have been theirs. Instead, India’s perseverance secured a 2-2 draw and all of its 12 WTC points. Those points could prove crucial in the context of the ICC World Test Championship 2025-2027.
Conclusion
The full england cricket team vs india national cricket team match scorecard for The Oval’s 5th Test is a study in how fine the margins are at the very top of Test cricket. Jaiswal’s hundred built the platform. It was Siraj’s continued brilliance with the ball that finished it off. Brook and Root left it all out there in the chase — 111 and 105 are not performances that require apologies — but six runs is six runs.
India won. The series ended 2-2. And The Oval served up a Test match that was worth watching all over again from ball one.

