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Alastair Cook vows to stay as England captain despite second Test defeat Alastair Cook vows to stay as England captain despite second Test defeat
(about 2 hours later)
Alastair Cook ruled out any possibility of resigning after England subsided to a humiliating defeat in the second Test at Lord’s. Alastair Cook defied the loudest calls yet for him to resign as England’s captain after his team slumped to a humiliating seventh defeat in nine Tests but dropped a heavy hint that his former deputy Matt Prior may be considering his international future.
“I’m trying my heart out, and I’m here as long as they want me,” he said, despite his own batting problems and the team’s wretched run that has now stretched to seven defeats in nine matches. Cook watched helpless from the balcony of the pavilion as a succession of England batsmen succumbed to short balls from Ishant Sharma either side of lunch, with Prior the most culpable, to gift India their first away Test win for more than three years and only their second at Lord’s.
“Yes it gets harder and harder, and it all heaps on me. But until that bloke taps you on the shoulder That prompted Andrew Strauss, his predecessor and a staunch ally, to wonder aloud for the first time if Cook “might think he’s had enough”. The captain refuted that suggestion within minutes, although he wavered slightly on a previous insistence that he will never resign and conceded that he cannot afford much more personal or collective failure before the decision is taken out of his hands.
“I’ve got an inner steel which I’ve got to keep drawing on. First and foremost I’ve got to start scoring runs. It’s a team game I’m fronting up and I think the lads in the dressing room will as well.” “I’m desperate to carry on,” he said. “There might be a time when I’m not desperate to carry on but now I want to be at the front when we’re winning. I still want to throw it all in [and] to be captain of England. Until that bloke taps you on the shoulder, I want to carry on.”
The selectors will meet on Tuesday morning to consider what changes to make before the third Test, which starts in Southampton next Tuesday. Cook said he had not spoken to the national selector, James Whitaker, or the managing director of England cricket, Paul Downton, since the start of the Test but there seems little chance of either tapping him on the shoulder after Tuesday morning’s meeting to decide what changes to make for the third Test, which starts in Southampton on Sunday.
Matt Prior looks especially vulnerable after a bad dismissal which sparked England’s collapse to defeat after lunch, but Cook said the decision would be left to the wicketkeeper who has been struggling with achilles, thigh and hand injuries this summer. Cook, however, has conceded that all the senior players who have so far failed to deliver this summer are under growing pressure. Although he gave a glowing endorsement of Prior’s contribution to the team, he left the door open for the veteran wicketkeeper to take the decision out of the hands of the selectors.
“It’s all up to Matt,” Cook said. “If he wants to keep playing there’s still a place for him, because I think he’s still the best wicketkeeper-batsman in the country. Of course you’ve got to prove that by performances. He’s hurting at the moment but he’s a fighter and you want people like him in the dressing room.” “It’s all up to Matt, it’s in his corner,” he said. “If he wants to continue playing for England, and he’s as hungry as he has been, only he will know that.”
Prior, who has played 79 Tests, struggled with an achilles problem in the early part of the summer and has also suffered thigh and hand injuries that experts believe have impeded his performances behind the stumps. His former agent, Alec Stewart, suggested at the weekend the 32-year-old should have surgery now in an effort to prolong his career.
“I haven’t had any tougher times in my career than at the moment,” said Cook. “But I don’t think walking away from it would be the way to go. I’ll stay until my position becomes untenable. If I’m not scoring runs by the end of the series and we’re losing more games, then it becomes tougher and tougher doesn’t it? I’m clearly maybe not the man to turn it round.
“Maybe things can change very quickly, who knows? Things can change the other way. If we win and I score runs, things do change. When I was made England captain I said to my wife that I was going to give it my all. If it’s not meant to be it’s not meant to be but I want to be proud of the way I have gone about it.
“Everyone has doubts, it would be only natural when you’re on your own or away from it. But it makes me more determined, I would just love to win this series, how much satisfaction that would be from the dark times.
“A tough loss in good conditions for us does keep making it harder, and not scoring the runs as well. It is getting tougher and tougher. Until I start scoring runs and the results change it’s tough. I’m not going to say I’m waking up every morning saying it’s the best I’ve felt in my cricketing career. But if and when we turn this around, and get 11 people playing close to their potential and we win a game of cricket, coming through the tough times will make it feel a lot better.”
He invoked the example of his first series as captain, in India in 2012-13, when he led from the front as England overturned a 1-0 series deficit to secure a famous victory, adding: “If I’m not good enough at the end of the summer then so be it but I’m trying my heart out to do this and I need to score runs and need to start winning but I’m here as long as I’m wanted.”