Cricket: India in box seat to face Blackcaps in test champ final after strong first day of final test against England

India has made a strong start to the fourth and final test against England in Ahmedabad, which has them in the box seat to face reach the test championship final against the Blackcaps. 

If India win or draw the fourth test, they'll qualify for the inaugural final but if England claim victory Australia will face the Kiwis at Lords. 

England all-rounder Ben Stokes has found their below-par batting display frustrating but defended the team selection.

The visitors shot themselves in the foot in the previous test at the same venue when they opted for a four-pronged seam attack on a spin-friendly track and incredible got beaten inside two days.

Scarred by that experience, Joe Root brought back off-spinner Dom Bess, along with specialist batsman Dan Lawrence, while quicks Stuart Broad and Jofra Archer missed out.

In the previous match, spinners claimed 28 of the 30 wickets that tumbled in five sessions.

The team later said Archer was dropped because of an elbow injury but it meant England have effectively fielded a lone frontline seamer in James Anderson, while Stokes himself is battling an upset stomach.

"We felt that seam isn't going to offer as much in terms of being a threat, it's more of a holding role," Stokes says. "It's definitely a better wicket than the last test match.

"I think as the day progressed, you could see that the ball started to spin more, and had more bounce."

In contrast, India quick Mohammed Siraj dismissed a couple of English batsmen, while Anderson claimed the lone Indian wicket to fall on Thursday on a more seamer-friendly pitch at the same venue.

"We're more than capable of scoring more than 300 on a wicket like that out here, it's frustrating," Stokes says.

The England vice-captain topscored for the tourists with a fighting 55 while Lawrence justified his recall with a fluent 46.

Stokes felt spinners Jack Leach and Bess would play important roles as the pitch deteriorates and also backed the decision to strengthen their batting order.

"Lengthening the batting lineup is something that we've taken away from the last test match, having an extra batter in case we're faced with similar conditions," Stokes added. 

Reuters/Newshub