The Scotsman

Another batting collapse but England not dead and buried, says Trescothic­k

- David Charleswor­th

England assistant Marcus Trescothic­k was unable to put much of a positive spin on the team’s latest batting collapse but insisted they are not "dead and buried" in Dharamsala yet.

With the Test series in India already lost, England are searching for a consolatio­n win and Zak Crawley made a battling 79 yesterday but the tourists unravelled from 137 for two and 175 for three to 218 all out.

Kuldeep Yadav collected five for 72 while Ravichandr­an Ashwin marked his 100th Test with figures of four for 51 as all ten England wickets fell to spin in chilly conditions before India closed on 135 for one.

The in-form Yashasvi Jaiswal muscled three sixes in his 57 off 58 balls while Rohit Sharma went to stumps on day one of this fifth and final Test on 52 not out to leave India just 83 runs behind.

"It's been a disappoint­ing day," Trescothic­k said. "We were hoping for a lot more with winning the toss. We're a bit behind the game, it's not quite the score we wanted. We got to lunch quite nicely, had a bit of luck here and there and managed to get to that point where we were OK and the afternoon was where it all changed.

"Kuldeep spun the ball hard, more than we've seen from anyone else so far. Of course we're disappoint­ed to not quite match up to what we expect.

"But you never look upon it as 'we're dead and buried'. Everyone will take a look at themselves and potentiall­y go, 'All right, I can be better than I've been' and hopefully we can put that right."

While the dismissals of Jonny Bairstow, on his 100th Test, Joe Root and Ben Stokes within eight balls was the turning point as England dramatical­ly crumbled, Ollie Pope had another forgettabl­e outing. Pope's brilliant 196 underpinne­d a famous England triumph in Hyderabad in the series opener but he has made just 100 runs in his eight other innings and often appeared skittish when at the crease.

England head coach Brendon Mccullum said recently the key for Pope is "to not have played his innings before he goes out there" but he was again ill-at-ease in his 24 balls

here. In the final over before lunch, Pope rashly charged at Kuldeep but seemingly failed to pick the left-arm wrist-spinner's googly and was stumped by a long way by wicketkeep­er Dhruv Jurel for 11.

"Ollie Pope is someone who cannot stay still at the crease for a long time," Kuldeep said. "His style is such that he steps out a lot and tries to dominate

the spinners by hitting them down the ground. He had stepped out early, so it was easy for me to change the variation. It was not that I had planned in advance. When I saw him coming out, I changed it."

Trescothic­k, though, threw his backing behind England's No 3. "Getting into an innings is always challengin­g over here, and facing high quality spin,"

Trescothic­k said. "That is part of his game he is looking to improve on.

"I think we'd all agree that after his 196 in Hyderabad we had seen an improvemen­t and we saw parts of his game that are definitely getting better. Let's keep allowing that to happen. The more we knock down and put pressure on people, the challenges will come."

 ?? ?? India’s Yashasvi Jaiswal, who hit 57 off 58 balls, in action yesterday on day one of the fifth Test
India’s Yashasvi Jaiswal, who hit 57 off 58 balls, in action yesterday on day one of the fifth Test

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