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This article was first published 9 years ago

Rueful Root brings up Decision Review System debate

July 12, 2014 12:05 IST

Image: Joe Root (right) and James Anderson walk back to the pavilion at the end of the third day's play
Photographs: Gareth Copley/Getty Images

Two debatable decisions went against England in the first Test against India at TrentBridge and middle-order batsman Joe Root said it was "little frustrating" to play without the Decision Review System.

PHOTOS: India's pacers have England reeling on Day 3

Scorecard

Sam Robson (59) and Matt Prior (5) were unlucky to have been given out by the umpires in debatable decisions and that did not help England's position in the ongoing Test.

"When you don't have DRS, it is a little frustrating. But you cannot moan about it. Until the ICC makes it mandatory for everyone to use, you cannot do anything about it, so you move on," said Root who was unbeaten on 78 at the end of third day.

He refused to blame his team's batsmen for the slump on the third day that saw them collapse from 134/1 to 202/7 handing India the advantage in the first Test.

Root had to come up with big partnerships with Stuart Broad and James Anderson to rescue his side.

"Our top order is quite good and they can have a perfect day mostly. Today wasn't a perfect day. When you go through a session like that, you need to react quickly and we didn't do that well enough today. So we need to learn from our mistakes and build on that," said Root.

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'We are not in an ideal situation, but we haven't lost yet'

Image: Stuart Broad hits out during his breezy knock
Photographs: Stu Forster/Getty Images

Root added 54 runs for the unbroken last wicket stand with Anderson (23 batting) to deny India a chance to bowl the hosts out on day three.

"Our top nine batsmen have Test hundreds. So they are not out and out specialist bowlers. They pride themselves in the way they can bat and it was great to see shift the pressure back on to India. They also took pressure off me and responded very well to the challenge," he said.

"The tea-break meant that India couldn't carry their momentum forward on this pitch and then Broad came out and played attacking cricket and put the bowlers under pressure. Anderson and Liam Plunkett played bravely in the final session then and we were able to frustrate India," he added.

Asked if England can save this Test match, Root stated, "We are not in an ideal situation, but we haven't lost yet. We have to put pressure on India to frustrate them. When we get the ball, we need to come out firing and put them under pressure straight away, anything can happen after that," Root said.

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