The Chronicle

Pitch not the Root cause of our loss - Joe

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JOE Root refused to condemn the pitch after accepting his England side were outplayed by India in a humbling two-day third Test defeat in Ahmedabad.

However, Root suggested the Internatio­nal Cricket Council may take their own view of another rampant turner.

Seventeen wickets fell inside the first two sessions at the new Narendra Modi Stadium, wrapping up India’s first innings and England’s second at warp speed to leave the hosts chasing just 49 for the win.

They promptly wrapped up victory by 10 wickets to ensure three full days went unused for just the seventh time in the last 75 years of Test history.

With just 140.2 overs sent down, it was the shortest match since 1935 in terms of balls bowled and only amplified the debate which raged over the fitness of the previous surface - a loose dustbowl in Chennai.

As captain Root made a point to assume responsibi­lity for his side’s shortcomin­gs and made it clear that being bowled out for 112 on day one, then 81 in their second attempt, was not good enough.

Yet it was hard to escape a feeling of exasperati­on at the extreme spin which has dominated for the past fortnight, even though Root himself was able to cash in to the tune of five wickets for eight runs with his occasional off-breaks.

He said: “I think this surface is a very challengin­g one, a very difficult one to play on.

“However, it is not for players to decide if it is fit for purpose, that is up to the ICC.

“Again, I am paid to play the game, not make those decisions, but it is something I am sure they will look at off the back of the last couple of matches.

“I am sure they will look at other wickets around the world at different times and maybe have to answer similar questions.”

Root added: “As players we have to try to counter it as best we can.

“It is frustratin­g and something we have to learn from - we have to get better and we have to keep finding a way to score runs on surfaces like this. India outplayed us.

“If I am getting five wickets on there then you can tell it is giving a fair amount of spin, that sums the pitch up slightly.

“There always has to be an element of home advantage because that is part of the beauty of Test cricket.

“You go around the world playing in all these wonderful places and you have to learn to develop your game, to find different ways.

“It is just how extreme you are willing to let the wickets be.”

Asked if the governing body should move to take greater control over the pitches, Root said: “I think that is something the ICC will look at and a decision they will have to make on their own.

“As a player all you can do is play what is in front of you.

“There is always going to be slight home advantage but it is a shame when you have so many fantastic players who cannot have an input into a Test match.”

Two players who barely registered on the occasion were James Anderson and Stuart Broad, England’s two record wicket-takers reduced to walk-on parts in a game where 28 dismissals out of 30 came against slow bowlers.

England will privately concede they picked the wrong team, with four pacemen leaving them poorly equipped for the nature of the contest but Root insisted there was logic to the selection, which saw Dom Bess overlooked.

He added “We thought the wicket would hold together better than it did - throughout all the practice days it seamed around.”

 ??  ?? Joe Root’s five wickets for eight runs proved all in vain for a humiliated England
Joe Root’s five wickets for eight runs proved all in vain for a humiliated England

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