Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Root fed up with team’s off-field issues ›

- Associated Press

I knew it would be challengin­g, and I knew there would be stuff around the cricket, but not to this extent. I’m fed up of talking about stuff that’s not cricket. I don’t know how I’ve still got all my hair. JOE ROOT, England skipper

PERTH: Joe Root’s first Ashes tour as England captain has been more eventful than he expected, just not in the way he had hoped.

“I knew it would be challengin­g, and I knew there would be stuff around the cricket, but not to this extent,” Root said of the off-field issues that have followed his squad around Australia. “I’m fed up of talking about stuff that’s not cricket. I don’t know how I’ve still got all my hair ... I can completely see how captaincy can take its toll.”

Only one team in Ashes history has rallied from 2-0 down to win the series: Don Bradman’s Australia in 1936-37 at home. England has only ever had one win at the WACA, in the 1978-79 series. Root has faced more questions about the team’s conduct and curfew than its cricket.

The latest episode, in which Duckett poured a drink on the head of veteran pace bowler Jimmy Anderson, came on a night when team officials had relaxed a midnight curfew.

“I feel like I’ve learned a large amount.” Root said. “The lads have to wake up and smarten up. It’s been frustratin­g ... very frustratin­g. Guys have made silly mistakes that of course are going to get blown out of proportion.”

Root, who took over the captaincy in July and led England in seven Tests against South Africa and the West Indies at home, is desperate to avoid a repeat of the series sweep on the last tour to Australia in 2013-14 and is urging his teammates to lift “for one of the biggest games of our lives” in the third Test.

England retained the same lineup from the second test, with one change in the batting order to promote Jonny Bairstow to No. 6 in a direct switch with Moeen Ali, who drops back to No. 7. Root will be looking for support from Cook, already England’s most-capped test player, who has no plans to retire just yet.

“Do I have a desire to carry on? Absolutely,” the 32-year-old left-hander said this week. “I wouldn’t be going to do extra gym sessions and extra batting behind closed doors if I wasn’t.”

SLUMP

Another player in a form slump is Australian batsman Peter Handscomb, who is facing being axed for the third test. Local media have suggested selectors will replace Handscomb with tall Western Australia allrounder Mitch Marsh.

While most attention at the WACA will be on the pacemen, who usually get a boost out of the extra bounce in the pitch, Root wants the England batsmen to target Australian offspinner Nathan Lyon. “Credit to Nathan; he’s made that very difficult to do that from surfaces that have offered good spin for him from the start.

“We have to have a clear way of how we want to try to put him under a bit more pressure,” the England skipper said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Joe Root.
REUTERS Joe Root.

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