India did not have a great start in the Test series against England at Headingley. Even if the score tally looks huge apparently, the scoreboard looks horrendous after the 5th or the 6th wicket. The top order has been the main contributor of the bulk of runs, with the middle to lower order doing almost nothing. Speaking about this, Dinesh Kartik, who is currently managing the commentary duties in England, said that India' batting looks like a Doberman dog. It actually happened before the commencement of day 5, when Mike Atherton asked Dinesh Kartik on what has been making him laugh. DK, being honest, said that it was the meme going around on the internet representing the pathetic situation of Indian batting line up. Dinesh was heard saying, "I just saw on twitter somebody is saying that Indian batting is like a Doberman dog. The head is good. The middle portion is okay. There is no tail at all." Watch the video here: That's one way to describe the India batting line-up, DK 🤣👇 pic.twitter.com/iqEL1Dw1eh — Sky Sports Cricket (@SkyCricket) June 24, 2025 Read also: Watch: Yashasvi Jaiswal Dances After Costly Drops Help England Win Test India seals historic defeat against England. India have had quite a number of unwanted records. At least 7 dropped catches and thereafter getting defeated dspite having five centuries in it—this has happened after 148 years of Test history. Despite three majestic centuries — Jaiswal (101), Gill (147), and Pant (134) — in the first innings and a brace from Pant (118) and Rahul (137) in the second, India squandered the edge due to another familiar lower-order collapse. After reaching 430/3, India were bundled out for 471, losing 7 wickets for just 41 runs. A similar tail-end tumble followed in the second innings where India lost 7 wickets for 77 runs. Chasing 371, England, powered by Ben Duckett’s 149 and Zak Crawley’s 65, cruised home with 5 wickets in hand. India’s bowling lacked bite in the final innings, with Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammad Siraj going wicketless, exposing the side’s finishing woes.