Why England’s Joe Root won’t repeat his ‘drop the mic’ celebration ever again | Cricket - Hindustan Times
close_game
close_game

Why England’s Joe Root won’t repeat his ‘drop the mic’ celebration ever again

Leeds | ByAgence France-Presse
Jul 19, 2018 04:07 PM IST

Joe Root slammed a second successive century as England produced another impressive display to beat India in the series-deciding final ODI and they wrapped up the three-match series 2-1.

Joe Root is keen to utilise his experience batting against spinner Kuldeep Yadav in limited-overs cricket during England’s upcoming Test series with India.

England's Joe Root celebrates his century during the 3rd ODI encounter against India in Headingley.(AFP)
England's Joe Root celebrates his century during the 3rd ODI encounter against India in Headingley.(AFP)

But Test captain Root made it clear one of the biggest lessons he had learnt from a one-day international series-clinching hundred at his Headingley home ground on Tuesday was never to repeat his unusual celebration.

Hindustan Times - your fastest source for breaking news! Read now.

When the Yorkshire batsman hit the winning boundary that both took him to exactly 100 not out and clinched an eight-wicket win with 33 balls to spare that saw England seal a 2-1 success in a three-match series, he dropped his bat.

READ | India vs England: Bhuvneshwar, Bumrah injuries leave pace pack unsettled

It was an echo of the ‘mic-drop’ end of set routine favoured by rock stars and comedians, and far removed from the traditional cricket gesture of raising the bat to acknowledge a hundred.

‘Embarrassing’

“It was something that I immediately regretted,” said Root.

“I’ve not heard the end of it, it was literally the most embarrassing thing I’ve done on a cricket field. I don’t think it will be the last I hear of it from the group -- they’ve been hammering me,” he added of the reaction of his England team-mates.

Far more encouraging for England was the return to form of Root, who had struggled against Kuldeep, who as a left-arm wrist-spinner is a rarity in world cricket.

Kuldeep had Root stumped by MS Dhoni for a duck in the first Twenty20 at Old Trafford and then snared him lbw for just three during India’s eight-wicket victory in the ODI series opener at Trent Bridge last week.

Root was not the only home batsman to struggle against Kuldeep, with the bowler’s stunning return of six for 25 in Nottingham the best by any spinner against England in ODI cricket.

But it was a different story at Lord’s on Saturday, where Root’s 113 not out saw England to an 86-run win that levelled things up at 1-1 before his national record 13th ODI hundred completed a come-from-behind 2-1 win in a three-match series.

England could face Kuldeep in Test cricket too after he was included Wednesday in India’s squad for the first three fixtures of a five-match series that starts at Birmingham’s Edgbaston ground on August 1.

Root, speaking before India unveiled that squad, said he’d gone back to basics in working out how to play Kuldeep rather than use the Merlyn spin-bowling machine for practice.

“I didn’t use Merlyn on this occasion. I looked at the three balls I faced and got out to -- one thing that’s very easy to do is over-analyse things, over-think things,” Root explained.

“I felt like I was picking him (Kuldeep) fine and when you look at it for what it actually was, both games my movements weren’t quick enough and I wasn’t getting close enough to the ball, either going forward or back.

READ | Bhuvneshwar Kumar’s fitness issue puts BCCI support staff under scanner

“The best players of spin in the world, their footwork is always sharp and when that contact point is there, you’re as still as possible,” added Root, who said his training regime was “literally under-arm feeds, trying to get close to the ball, simple as that and the mind-set of either giving myself as much time as possible or smothering the spin.”

England, who in limited-overs cricket are captained by Eoin Morgan, are now number one in the ODI rankings and among the favourites to win next year’s World Cup on home soil.

But they are fifth in an equivalent International Cricket Council Test table topped by India.

Root urged the Test side to follow the England one-day team’s desire for individual and collective improvement, which was fuelled in part by a woeful first-round exit at the 2015 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.

“It’s something we are trying really hard to replicate within the Test team,” Root said.

“Hopefully over time, and it’s not something that will happen overnight, we’ll see big improvements long-term within the group,” added the 27-year-old, now second in the latest ICC ODI batting rankings, behind India captain Virat Kohli, published Wednesday.

“It’s about putting the hard yards in and doing that extra bit of work and sometimes doing the stuff that doesn’t always make you feel good but ultimately will make you a better player.”

Stay updated with the latest Cricket News, IPL Live Scores, and get exclusive insights with the RCB vs KKR Live Score, IPL 2024 Schedule, match highlights, and more. Explore a comprehensive Cricket Schedule, track the race for the Purple Cap and Orange Cap in IPL 2024, check Virat Kohli performance and stay ahead with all the cricket-related updates on the Hindustan Times website and app.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
Share this article
SHARE
Story Saved
Live Score
OPEN APP
Saved Articles
Following
My Reads
Sign out
New Delhi 0C
Friday, March 29, 2024
Start 14 Days Free Trial Subscribe Now
Follow Us On