Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Will play Ashwin with an open mind, says Root

- Sanjjeev K Samyal sanjjeev.samyal@htlive.com

MUMBAI: Taking on a fullstreng­th India high on confidence after their win in Australia will rank among England’s most daunting tasks in recent times. With the Chennai Test marking a special moment for their talismanic batsman and captain, Joe Root, being his 100th Test, England though will not be short of inspiratio­n.

What adds lustre to the opening act of the box-office series is that the 30-year-old Yorkshire batsman will be the main target of the hosts. The England captain has played a lot of cricket against India (16 Tests), and with a lot of success. His average of 56.84 (1,412 runs, 4x100s) is his best against any team except Sri Lanka, and way higher than his career average of 49.40. Scores of 228 and 186 in the 2-0 win in Sri Lanka last month underline the mood he is in.

“On the back of those two games (in Sri Lanka), we’ve got a huge amount of confidence. We are very realistic of where we are as a team. We know this is going to be a huge challenge for us… You want to play against the best teams in the world and try and do well in their conditions,” Root said in a media interactio­n on Thursday.

Since he made his debut in Nagpur on the 2012 tour with a promising 73, the middle-order batsman has been a thorn in India’s flesh. He dominated the 2014 Tests at home (518 runs, average 103.60), scoring two big hundreds and three half-centuries. In his first seven Tests against India, he scored three hundreds and four fifties. On his last tour, though England were routed, Root aggregated 491 runs. He has handled India’s spinners well, including R Ashwin. The off-spinner is oozing with confidence after a good show in Australia and will be on his home ground for the first two Tests.

“I will just try and play Ashwin. I won’t go out there trying to dominate or defend. If I do that well for a period of time, then I should be able to score some big runs. But he is a fine bowler, got a great record in India and is probably full of confidence. I’ve played against him before, scored some runs. He’s probably got the better of me a couple of times, and it’s going to be a great battle. Just having a ball-by-ball mentality will probably serve me best throughout.”

Root’s 426 runs in Sri Lanka were scored at a strike rate of 65 plus. He is a master of the sweep shot, which is a handy weapon on subcontine­nt tracks. It’s a stroke he worked on as a teenager to compensate for a lack of power. “For me, it’s a lucrative shot, something that generates a lot of runs. The conditions and the way the pitches were in Sri Lanka, that was the lowest risk option. If there is a bit more bounce and turn it becomes a dangerous shot. But when you come up against one of the best sides at their home, that is the challenge we are really looking forward to.”

With 8,249 runs and 19 centuries, Root is among the premier batsmen of this era along with Virat Kohli, Steve Smith and Kane Williamson. Root versus Kohli will be a side-show again. When England played here in 2016, Kohli topped with 655 runs, averaging 109.

His form suggests Root will be up for the challenge. “Firstly, I look at those three guys and learn as much as I can. They are the three leading players of the world and it’ll be silly not to watch how they go about things, how they manage their own games as well and keep evolving and keep getting better all the time. Then try and add that to my own game. They all play very differentl­y, have different styles. That’s the beauty of the sport— there’s no one right way of batting or bowling. Everyone can figure out for themselves.”

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