The Scotsman

Stokes insists it’s harsh to say England lack a ruthless streak in India

- David Charleswor­th

Ben Stokes dismissed suggestion­s England lack a ruthless edge and expressed pride at how his team have fared in Indian conditions after not being given a "chance in hell" of success.

England succumbed to a first Test series defeat under the leadership of captain Stokes and head coach Brendon Mccullum, as India moved into an unassailab­le

3-1 lead with a fivewicket victory in Ranchi yesterday.

India hit back from 177 for seven in reply to 353 to keep the firstinnin­gs deficit to 46 then England crumbled from 110 for three to 145 all out on a turning track and could not stop the hosts chasing 192.

The tourists have let slip promising opportunit­ies on several occasions in this series so far but Stokes is not one for regrets and instead the skipper commended Ravichandr­an Ashwin, Kuldeep Yadav and Ravindra Jadeja for swinging this Test India's way after they shared all ten wickets in England's second innings.

"Everyone goes into the game with their best intentions, when it doesn't pay off people say we're not ruthless but when they do, they say we are," Stokes said. "I don't really understand the saying.

"We try to do what we think is the best way to win the game. It can be a throwaway comment when people say we're not ruthless enough. You can say everything is a missed chance when it doesn't go well. "When India have a sniff in conditions like that, any team is going to find it hard. When you've got three worldclass spinners operating in those conditions, you know you're going to be up against it.

"Nothing is impossible, I wouldn't say that. But it was nigh-on impossible to operate how we wanted to. Cricket is always skill against skill. On this occasion, their skill was better than ours."

The chase was far from straightfo­rward for India, who slipped to 120 for five as Joe Root and Tom Hartley snared Yashasvi Jaiswal and Rohit Sharma before Shoaib Bashir claimed a three-wicket haul. But an unbroken stand of 72 from Shubman Gill (52 not out) and Dhruv Jurel (39no) got India home to dash England's dream of a series decider in Dharamshal­a, with the final Test starting on March 7.

India extended a proud winning record at home to 17 successive Test series against an England side who have relied on a rookie spin attack after Jack Leach's tour-ending injury in the opening match.

"We didn't have a chance in hell of even competing with India but even that wasn't an easy win for India and I think they would admit that," Stokes told the BBC.

He added in his press conference: "We always still felt in the game. Even with 30 runs left we knew that if we went bangbang, all the pressure was back on India.

"I'm proud of how everyone stuck at their task even if their role was just to be a fielder. That's what I want from everyone, to never give up because you never know where a game is going to go.

James Anderson bowled a three-over spell but was off the field for much of the fourth day. Stokes revealed no risks were taken with the 41-yearold because he was feeling tightness in his quadriceps.

 ?? PICTURE: GARETH COPLEY/GETTY IMAGES ?? India batsmen Dhruv Jurel picks up some runs after Ollie Pope goes close to a catch in the fourth Test
PICTURE: GARETH COPLEY/GETTY IMAGES India batsmen Dhruv Jurel picks up some runs after Ollie Pope goes close to a catch in the fourth Test

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