Western Morning News

England’s batting lets them down again in India

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BEN Stokes admitted England fell 100 runs short of expectatio­ns on the first day of the series decider against India following another chastening encounter with spin.

The tourists had the chance to banish the memories of their two-day defeat at the same venue last week, winning the toss and finding batting conditions to be less extreme than they had expected.

But although the ball was not fizzing and turning or skidding unpredicta­bly off the pitch, Ravichandr­an Ashwin and Axar Patel still found a way to run through the order, sharing seven more wickets as England were felled for 205.

India had time to reach 24 for one in reply but Stokes, who top-scored with 55, was honest enough to accept an opportunit­y had slipped through his side’s fingers.

“We should still be batting,” was his succinct summary. “I think we’ll look back on that and be disappoint­ed by some of the batting. We’re more than capable of scoring more than 300 on a wicket like that out here, it’s frustratin­g.

“We sit down as a group and say we’ll try to put it (the previous game) behind us but that’s easier said than done. I know, overall, it’s a much better wicket than the last one we played on so we’re just disappoint­ed not to still be batting.

“I feel very frustrated that I spent twoand-a-half hours trying to avoid getting out to a straight ball then I ended up getting out to a straight ball.”

Stokes had plenty on his mind at the time. Not only had he emerged as his side’s leading light with the bat, he had been battling the symptoms of a stomach bug and was also pencilled in to open the bowling after a selection gamble left England with James Anderson as a lone frontline paceman.

He was clearly feeling under the weather and was worryingly non-committal about his prospects of reaching 100 per cent in the coming days. “I’ll tell you the truth, I’ll just have to wait and see, day by day,” was the best he could offer.

Stokes also sought to suck any drama out of an early exchange of words with home captain Virat Kohli.

“It’s two profession­als showing they care about the sport that they love,” he said.

“A lot gets said these days when two guys seem to come to words out in the middle. There was completely nothing untoward, just two blokes who care about what they do and two guys who definitely don’t back down.”

Mohammed Siraj had his own take, telling reporters in Hindi: “He (Stokes) abused me and I told Virat, who handled it. It’s important to have the backing of your captain.”

 ?? Aijaz Rahi ?? > Ben Stokes reacts after being dismissed
Aijaz Rahi > Ben Stokes reacts after being dismissed

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