Weather has played a stop-start game so far in the the ongoing rescheduled fifth Test between India and England at Edgbaston.
With the rain playing spoilsport on the opening two days, it would be interesting to see whether the fourth day sees rain interruptions or not.
The weather in England, of course, is notoriously fickle, but the good news is that there is no forecast of downpour in the remaining two days of the match.
As per Accuweather, the weather is expected to be bright and sunny on Day 4, which might see a action-packed full day of play. Meanwhile, the match is expected to start at 3:00 pm (IST).
Meanwhile, talking about the match, India's famed pace bowling unit for the umpteenth time put its team in pole position, bowling out England for 284 before the hosts just about managed to put a foot in the door by getting the top-order cheaply in an engrossing third day's play in the fifth Test.
At stumps, India were 125 for 3 in their second innings with Cheteshwar Pujara (50 batting, 139 balls) displaying his gutsy avatar with a half-century, battling it out in the company of the flamboyant Rishabh Pant (30 batting, 46 balls). The overall lead stood at 257 runs.
However, the dismissals of Shubman Gill (4), Hanuma Vihari (11) and Virat Kohli (20) would make the visitors uncomfortable going into the final day.
Kohli, as usual, got the best delivery of the entire third day's play when rival skipper Ben Stokes got one to rear up off length and no batter would have survived such a delivery with less than split second of reaction time.
Kohli, who was standing a good two feet outside the batting crease, was literally putting his best foot forward to defend from 17 yards while tackling the probing questions that James Anderson kept on asking but, as luck would have it, that delivery outside the off-stump had his name written on it.
Pujara played his usual waiting game with the clips off his toes and the occasional square cuts when provided width. Pant, on the other hand, mixed caution with aggression and if he stays for an hour on the fourth morning, he will completely turn the tables.