Mohammed Siraj dismisses England captain Ollie Pope with a ‘magical supply’, video goes viral
Mohammad Siraj shocked English captain Ollie Pope along with his magical ball within the fifth Check match of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy performed on the Oval.

New Delhi: After limiting Crew India to 224 runs, the English staff made a blistering begin within the first innings of the Oval Check. The opening pair of Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett tormented the Indian bowling assault within the first 15 overs. Duckett-Crowley scored 92 runs in 12.5 overs. Duckett was dismissed by Akash Deep, whereas Crawley was despatched again to the pavilion by Prasidh Krishna.
Nonetheless, captain Ollie Pope was making an attempt to calm down on the crease and had scored 22 runs. However then a magical ball from Mohammed Siraj shocked Ollie Pope. After hitting the wicket, the ball took such a flip that the English captain may solely stare on the bowler.
How was the magical supply by Siraj?
The fifth ball of the twenty fifth over bowled by Siraj first hit the off stump after which modified course and turned inside. Ollie Pope fully failed to know this ball and the ball hit his pad. Siraj and Crew India appealed strongly, however the on-field umpire declared him not out.
Did Crew India take a assessment?
After a whole lot of dialogue, captain Shubman Gill took a assessment within the final one second. This assessment labored for Crew India and the ball was seen hitting the center stump. The on-field umpire needed to change his resolution and Pope was out after scoring 22 runs.
WATCH VIDEO BELOW:
SIRAJ, THE SUPERSTAR. 🇮🇳 pic.twitter.com/btjEmIj3Af
— Mufaddal Vohra (@mufaddal_vohra) August 1, 2025
What document did Mohammed Siraj obtain?
Together with dismissing Ollie Pope, Mohammed Siraj has additionally accomplished 200 wickets in worldwide cricket. Siraj has taken the utmost variety of 115 wickets in Check cricket. On the similar time, he has 71 wickets in ODIs and 14 wickets in T20Is.
latest video
latest pick

news via inbox
Nulla turp dis cursus. Integer liberos euismod pretium faucibua