The Asian Age

Bayliss hopes England bounce back

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Leeds, Aug. 31: England coach Trevor Bayliss is confident his “hurting” side will bounce back from their shock second Test defeat by the West Indies in next week’s series-decider at Lord’s.

The West Indies chased down a target of 322 on Tuesday’s fifth day at Headingley to win by five wickets and square the three-match contest at 1-1 following their innings and 209-run thrashing in the first Test at Edgbaston.

Shai Hope led the way for the West Indies in Leeds. Having never before made a Test hundred, his 12th match at this level yielded two with the 23-year-old’s brilliant 118 not out on Tuesday coming just days after his first innings 147.

“They were hurting and to me that’s a good thing,” said Bayliss of England’s reaction to a disappoint­ing defeat.

“If the team is hurting after a loss, it means something to them.

“I’m sure they will be fully focused and ready to put things right in the next Test,” the Australian added.

England captain Joe Root appeared to have made a well-judged declaratio­n when, on his Yorkshire home ground, he closed the hosts’ second innings on 490/8 late Monday.

Bayliss backed his skipper’s move by saying: “I hope the result doesn’t change the way (Root) thinks about the game. In that situation, more times than not, we’ll win more than we lose.”

This was England’s second defeat in six Tests after they also lost the second match of the recent series at home to South Africa — with Bayliss’s men eventually taking a four-match contest 3-1.

At Headingley, England fell 169 runs behind on first innings but battled back with the bat second time around.

However, having dropped in-form third seamer Toby Roland-Jones essentiall­y so all-rounder Chris Woakes could get some overs under his belt ahead of the Ashes, England were twice undone in the field, especially on Tuesday when they only got half-way to taking the 10 second-innings wickets they needed to go 2-0 up.

“Batting was probably a little more difficult than it originally looked although it was still a decent wicket. To a certain degree, the (batsmen) learnt their lesson from the first innings. I thought they showed a lot of character,” said Bayliss.

“When we bowled, they were a little bit two sides of the wicket and a little bit short.

“We seemed to be fairly frustrated throughout that first bowling innings and I think that held over into the second innings.

 ?? — AP ?? A file photo of England coach Trevor Bayliss (left) and Ben Stokes.
— AP A file photo of England coach Trevor Bayliss (left) and Ben Stokes.

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