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England underprepared for India: Tresco

Rory DollardAAP
Stuart Broad's dismissal by Jasprit Bumrah came amid a flurry of late England wickets.
Camera IconStuart Broad's dismissal by Jasprit Bumrah came amid a flurry of late England wickets. Credit: AP

Batting coach Marcus Trescothick admits that England came into their marquee Test series against India underprepared after the hosts were dismissed for 183 on day one at Trent Bridge.

The home side arrived for the high-profile encounter on the back of a steady stream of limited-overs cricket, be it Twenty20 action in the Blast or the inaugural season of The Hundred, and had precious little red-ball practice to call on.

Several of the top seven had not played any first-class cricket since their tame defeat by New Zealand in June, while Jos Buttler and Sam Curran last wore their whites six and eight months ago, respectively.

It was little surprise then to see a pedigree India seam attack pick holes in their hosts over the course of 66 sobering overs. In all, there were four ducks, a floodlit evening collapse of six for 22 and a top score of 64 from captain Joe Root.

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Trescothick, who has had only a couple of meaningful sessions with his charges since they reconvened from their stints in the 100-ball arena, accepted the fixture list had not helped.

Asked if the preparation time had been appropriate, he said: "It's probably not, no. Scheduling is always an issue, trying to get the balance right for the batters moving into Test series.

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"Of course, you would want them to play a certain amount of red-ball cricket going into it.

"We all appreciate that trying to get all the cricket in for what you need across the whole summer - county teams, The Hundred, all these competitions going on - there's no easy solution to get this right and something always has to give.

"We don't want to use it as an excuse but we'd love to get more time into them at the crease - bowling with the red ball, facing the red ball and have the preparation be slightly better."

Further debate and introspection over the future make-up of the domestic calendar is a certainty but for now England must plot a way through the next four days in Nottingham and the four matches after that.

"Today has not been the ideal day, of course, but that doesn't define how the rest of the game or the rest of the series is going to go. We'll go away, lick our wounds this evening and find a way to try and get back in the game," said Trescothick.

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