England grope for answers after another thrashing : The Tribune India

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England grope for answers after another thrashing

NORTH SOUND:England have held a crisis meeting after a second humiliation by the West Indies in as many Tests left the team worried by their poor form in a year they host the World Cup and the Ashes series against Australia, coach Trevor Bayliss said.

England grope for answers after another thrashing

Jason Holder



North Sound, February 4 

England have held a crisis meeting after a second humiliation by the West Indies in as many Tests left the team worried by their poor form in a year they host the World Cup and the Ashes series against Australia, coach Trevor Bayliss said. Following a 381-run defeat by the hosts in the first Test in Barbados last month, England suffered a 10-wicket thrashing in Antigua on Saturday to lose the three-match series 2-0 after only seven days of cricket.

  “We want to get to the root of why we haven’t played as well as we’d like. We posed some questions to them last night in the changing room and gave them 24 hours to think about it,” Bayliss said. “Any defeat is not good. It’s how you come back. Obviously we didn’t come back too well in this game. It’s a big year ahead... I’d have to say it’s a concern,” he added.

Skipper Joe Root said after their latest loss that England’s batting was to blame after managing 187 and 132 in two innings. “We haven’t seemed to have the will to fight. There have been some loose shots and other guys have been tentative,” Bayliss said. “We have a lot of guys averaging in the low thirties. In years gone by, that wouldn’t have been good enough to stay in the team,” he added.

England host the 50-overs World Cup starting in May before welcoming arch-rivals Australia in August and September. Bayliss said some batsmen in the team were more confident in the ODIs than the longest format, suggesting that they needed to strike a balance. “Some are more suited to the ODI style and still trying to come to terms with what is the best rhythm of playing their Test cricket,” he said.

“We’ve got to find a way to score. If that means batting time, or picking guys (who play) more in that vein, then so be it. Sometimes I feel the message between One-day cricket and Test cricket gets muddled,” he added.  — Reuters

WI captain Holder banned for slow over-rate  

Dubai: West Indies captain Jason Holder has been suspended for the third and final Test against England due to his team’s slow over-rate during their victory in Antigua last week, the International Cricket Council (ICC) announced on Monday. Cricket’s governing body banned Holder despite the hosts playing four seamers and the regular fall of wickets as England were bowled out for 187 and 132. ICC said the Windies were two overs short of their target for the match. Holder was previously found guilty of a slow over-rate during his team’s third Test defeat by Sri Lanka last June. 

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