England’s ‘Bazball’ faces toughest task yet in India series

Dailyearth

DE Online Desk
England’s “Bazball” style of attacking cricket faces its biggest challenge yet when they play an India side who have not lost a home Test series in more than a decade.
The five-Test series begins Thursday in Hyderabad, and although India will be without Virat Kohli for the first two matches because of personal reasons, they start as clear favourites.
But it was England who were the last team to beat India on home turf, when Alastair Cook’s team won a four-match series 2-1.
Monty Panesar, who was part of that team, said the tourists had nothing to fear in a series where spin is expected to play a huge part.
“England have got every chance of winning Test matches out there,” the former England spinner told talkSPORT.
“They’ve got to have a positive mindset. Ben Stokes himself, he’s got to think, ‘Can I make Bazball successful on turning pitches?’
“That’s obviously going to be his biggest challenge.”
Skipper Stokes and England prepared in Abu Dhabi instead of playing a tour match in India, which drew criticism in some quarters at home and raised fears England could be “undercooked”.
Underlining the scale of the task facing England, Panesar added: “If he wins in India he will probably be known as one of the greatest captains ever to captain England, and one of the greatest captains ever in Test cricket.”
India and England drew 2-2 in their last series meeting in England in 2021-22.
India’s Rohit Sharma watches the ball after playing a shot in Bengaluru on January 17
England coach Brendon McCullum has helped transform England’s red-ball fortunes since joining forces with Stokes in 2022, the pair taking over a team that had won just one of its previous 17 Tests.
England have since won 13 out of 18 Tests under the duo, playing an attacking brand of cricket dubbed “Bazball” in reference to former New Zealand captain McCullum’s nickname.
But there were the first murmurings of dissent towards the all-action approach in the 2-2 home Ashes draw with Australia last summer.
Veteran pace bowler James Anderson and senior batsman Joe Root are the only two surviving members of England’s last Test triumph in India.

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