Josh Tongs revealed England’s plans on 5 of 1 Leeds Test

The equation is simple: England require 350 runs, India needs 10 wickets 5 days of the Leeds Test. Who will start a series on a high?
England pacer Josh Tongue has made it clear that there’s only one result his team is chasing on Day 5 of the Leeds Test against India: victory. Chasing a steep 371, the hosts moved to 21 without loss at stumps on Day 4, and despite the scoreboard pressure and the deteriorating surface, Tongue says England’s mindset under Ben Stokes remains unchanged. They have been ambassadors of attacking cricket, which is absolutely England need on Tuesday.
“[We will] Just go to win. This is a clear message in the dressing room“The tongue said, who played his role in wrapping India’s second innings, took three wickets in the same over. “This is just about being as positive as we can. They are going to bowl well many times tomorrow, but it is important that we pressurize that bit and apply it again. I don’t see why we can’t chase it.”

England’s Bazball philosophy under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum has produced just one draw in their tenure of 36 Tests. That game was also the rain-marred Ashes game in 2023 at Manchester. And even with weather potentially affecting play on Tuesday, Tongue insisted England won’t be playing for safety.
KL Rahul expects a result too, just not the one England want
KL Rahul, who was India’s standout batter with a composed 137 in the second innings, echoed Tongue’s confidence in a result but from India’s point of view. “There’s definitely going to be a result,” Rahul said. “That’s what England have said very openly, and their style of cricket suggests that as well. It gives us a good opportunity to pick up 10 wickets.”
Having batted for over four hours on Day 4, Rahul knows just how challenging the surface has become. “I didn’t feel set at any given stage. The wicket’s taken a beating and might break even more tomorrow. We know their style — aggressive, counterattacking — so we’ll keep that in mind with our fields and lengths.”
India’s 364 in the second innings came despite another lower-order collapse, where they lost their last four wickets for just 15 runs. While it denied them a chance to bat England entirely out of the game, Rahul chose to focus on the broader gains. “Yes, ideally we would’ve wanted 40–50 more,” he admitted. “But the positive is that we’ve crossed 350 in both innings. That was one of our goals before the series — to post big first-innings scores regularly.”
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