On a rare occasion, India and England ended with tied scores after the first innings at the Lords cricket Ground. Both England and India scored 387 runs after the first innings. India could have had a lead, but the wickets fell rapidly after Ravindra Jadeja's departure. Washington Sundar, the only batter down the order after Jads, went for a biggle and got palmed by Harry Brook, leaving Mohammed Siraj again as the not-out batter for India. Prior to that, KL Rahul got his 10th Test century, his fourth in England and second at Lord's, being the only Indian apart from Dilip vengasarkar to have multiple centuries in this venue. But keeping aside everything, the fact that caught the eyes were, the leveled score. Read also: Starc Shines in 100th Test as Aussies Collapse at Sabina Park When did scores level after first innings in a Test? Ironically, Tim Southee was a part of the happening back in 2015 when he was a pacer for New Zealand, who took four wickets against England. After a decade, he is coaching the England team when it happened with India. In 2015, at Leeds, against England, New Zealand scored 350 runs. Luke Ronchi was the highest scorer for the Kiwi, scoring 88 runs, while Stuart Broad took a fifer. Coming to bat, England's Adam Lyth pulled a century. New Zealand won the match by 199 runs, with BJ Watling scoring a hundred. NZ declared the innings scoring 454 runs and losing eight wickets. Kane Williamson and Mark Craig took three wickets each and bundled the Englishmen to 255. Well, England has been in all the scenarios again, as it was when it happened to India back in 1986 in Birmingham. England scored 390, with the captain, Mike Gatting, scoring a ton. For India, Mohinder amarnath scored 79, the highest from his side. Neil Foster took three wickets. In their second innings, England were dismissed for 235, with Graham Gooch top-scoring with 40 runs, while Chetan Sharma picked up six wickets. Set a target of 236 for victory, India ran out of time and could only reach 174, resulting in a draw. Sunil Gavaskar contributed with a fifty. Interestingly, in the 1958 Kanpur Test against the West Indies, both teams ended their first innings with identical scores of 222. However, India went on to lose that match by a hefty margin of 203 runs.