Cook puts India to sword
Alastair Cook's 182 not out led England into a commanding position against India on the second day of the third Test at Edgbaston here on Wednesday.
At stumps, England were 456 for three for in reply to India's mediocre 224 -- a lead of 232 runs.
Cook's fellow left-hander Eoin Morgan was unbeaten on 44 in a fourth-wicket stand so far worth 82.
England were in complete control as they pursued a win that would give them both an unbeatable 3-0 lead in the four-Test series and see them replace India at the top of the ICC's Test Championship table.
Cook's ton was his 19th in Tests and only five players -- Walter Hammond, Colin Cowdrey, Geoffrey Boycott (22 each), Ken Barrington and Cook's mentor Graham Gooch (both 20) -- have now made more for England than the 26-year-old Essex opener, currently playing in his 71st match at this level.
Cook's latest century, his first of a series where he'd managed just 20 runs in four previous innings, also saw him equal the records of both England great Len Hutton and current captain Andrew Strauss.
Together with fellow left-handed opener Strauss, Cook shared a first-wicket stand of 186 before the skipper fell for 87 to leg-spinner Amit Mishra.
He then put on 122 with Kevin Pietersen, who made a dashing 63, including a superb straight driven six off Mishra.
England started the day's final session on 319 for two, a lead of 95 runs, with Cook 129 not out and Pietersen unbeaten on 36.
Pietersen completed his fifty in an Ishant Sharma over where he scored 14 runs, including three boundaries with the best a clip from outside off-stump through midwicket.
But Praveen Kumar, a shining light for a lacklustre India, broke the third-wicket stand when he had Pietersen lbw.
The medium-pacer had previously bowled Ian Bell, on his Warwickshire home ground and fresh from a hundred in England's 319-run second Test win, for 34 with a beauty that uprooted off-stump.
Kumar finished the day with economical figures of two for 75 in 32 overs.
But the remainder of an India attack, where three bowlers conceded at least 100 runs each, and missing injured spearhead Zaheer Khan couldn't contain England as they made the most of batting conditions far better than when Strauss won the toss and fielded.
India were also hampered by shoddy catching, summed up when Rahul Dravid dropped a routine slip chance when Bell had made 30.
Morgan was given two lives, first when Sreesanth put down an even easier effort at backward point when the Dubliner had made 17 and then when Dravid -- who has more catches to his name than anyone else in Test cricket -- inexplicably spilled another sitter at slip in the last over of the day.
Strauss's 87 was his best Test score since he made 110 at Brisbane in November.
SCORES IN BRIEF
INDIA: First innings 224 (Dhoni 77; Broad 4-53, Bresnan 4-62)
ENGLAND: First innings 456 for 3 (Strauss 87, Cook 182 not out, Bell 34, Pietersen 63, Morgan 44; Kumar 2-75)
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