The Free Press Journal

Alastair Cook confident

England can end World Cup drought

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You can never write off India, they are an exceptiona­l oneday team, Virat Kohli is a brilliant captain, brilliant player

Alastair Cook believes England can end decades of World Cup disappoint­ment with a triumph on home soil this year.

England have never won the men's World Cup, but with 100 days to go until the start of the latest edition, a team captained by Eoin Morgan are top of the 50-over world rankings.

Former England skipper Cook, who retired from internatio­nal cricket last year as the country's highest Test run-scorer and most-capped player, said there were several reasons why Morgan's men could go one better than the England teams that lost in the 1979, 1987 and 1992 finals.

"They're a very settled side, they've got 15 players pretty much nailed on for that squad," Cook told AFP at a World Cup event in London's Trafalgar Square on Tuesday.

"Everyone knows their role, they're very comfortabl­e in their role, they've got a lot of strength in depth, they seem to have a lot of options covered and they're an exciting team to watch.

"They are a brilliant oneday side."

Cook never played in a World Cup, with the lefthanded opening batsman dramatical­ly dropped from the squad that then failed to beat a fellow Test nation while suffering a group-stage exit at the 2015 edition in Australia and New Zealand.

But Cook said a change of attitude lay behind England's rise up the one-day rankings since that dismal display.

"Probably over the years we've really concentrat­ed on Test cricket as a nation. Over the last three or four years we've really given the oneday cricket its due," he said.

It was a point emphasised by former England spinner Graeme Swann, who said, "I just think England are picking the right team these days.

"They're picking one-day specialist­s and the sky's the limit.

"When they bat, people like Jason Roy, Jonny Bairstow, they think that (scoring) 400 is feasible rather than an impossible dream. I think England have finally picked a very aggressive team as well, with Eoin Morgan, who's a brilliant captain.

"They've got a team that is putting them in firm contention to win this World Cup," insisted Swann, who added "I never thought we (England) would win it deep down when I was there."

Swann was a member of the only England men's side to have won a major global trophy, the 2010 World Twenty20 in the Caribbean, and sees parallels between that team and Morgan's men.

"The only world trophy I thought we had a genuine chance of winning was the World Twenty20 in the West Indies that we did, because we were ahead of the curve there.

"We picked a team of specialist­s, people like Craig Kieswetter, Michael Lumb -- and I think that's what England have finally started doing in the one-day game as well."

But Swann warned that England would face several tough opponents in their quest for World Cup glory.

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