Western Daily Press

Anderson gets better all the time, insists Root

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of the ordinary from the plans we had,” he said. “I was just lucky really with a couple that hit bare patches and a bit of reverse as well.

“So there was a bit of luck involved as well, but I was happy with how it went. It’s always nice to see the stumps cartwheeli­ng out the ground. It doesn’t happen very often at my age, so I’m really happy with it.

“To be honest I was more expecting an lbw, one to keep low or a caught midwicket with one that stuck in the pitch a little bit.”

Root, who led his team to their sixth successive overseas victory dating back to three wins in South Africa and two last month in Sri Lanka, was on hand to fill in the blanks left by Anderson’s modesty.

“He’s just the GOAT I reckon, leave it there. He seems to get better all the time,” he said. “His skill level keeps improving, his work-rate is as good as anyone’s I’ve ever seen and his fitness levels are probably the best they’ve ever been. He’s a credit to English cricket.

“When you’re under pressure and need something to happen, if you’ve got him in your armoury it’s a very comfortabl­e position to be in.”

Asked to place Anderson’s first six balls in context, Root reached for an old touchstone of English cricket.

“I can’t think of (a better over) in my time. It reminded me of Andrew Flintoff in 2005, the impact of that over to (Ricky) Ponting and (Justin) Langer. Big-game players stand up and do special things.”

Root can also claim to have done special things as captain, levelling Michael Vaughan’s national record of 26 Test match wins as captain in four games fewer.

He had been subjected to plenty of scrutiny for his decision not to declare on day four, but that issue fell off the radar as his attack got things done with more than a session to spare. Having set the game up with his first-innings double century, Root was more than happy to back his own assessment of conditions.

“As the batter who spent the most time out there on that wicket I felt I had the best gauge of it,” he said.

“I didn’t want to give India any chance of winning the game. It would have been damaging if we’d lost. All we needed to do was be relentless with the areas we bowled and the wicket would do the rest.”

The skipper will take immense satisfacti­on from inflicting India’s first home defeat since 2017 – their only setback in their last 35 outings – but with three matches to go was eager to put the achievemen­t in perspectiv­e.

“We’ve set a benchmark now and have something to work from and compare ourselves to. But we can’t be happy with what we’ve done,” he said. “They have got some wonderful individual players that will all be hurting right now and will want to prove a point when they come to play again. But I’m proud of the performanc­e and to sit here 1-0 up feels good.”

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