IND vs Eng: ‘Where are they getting 20 wickets?’ Stuart Broad Sounds alarm bells on England’s bowling attack | Cricket news

A few days before the first test of the five -match series between India and England, Stuart Broad questioned the inexperienced bowling attack of Ben Stokes -led team.On the early day of the Test match, there was a lack of bite in the England attack. They were at all places with their length, and hardly any stage saw him putting continuous pressure on the Indian batsmen. India finished the day at 350 at 350, with Captain Shubman Gill (127* Not Out) and Yashsvi Jaiswal (101) with excellent centuries.Broad, who took 604 Test wickets during his career, included 74 against India, that England’s attack could struggle against India’s talented batting unit.“Looking at England with injuries that he got at this time – where are they getting 20 wickets?” Broad told the Times.“Chris Woakes will probably have a new ball. I love Vocices, but I am worried about the number of bowling overs in this summer. He is not enough. He is someone who needs overs under his belt to get his rhythm. He is not like Mark Wood, which can hit the ground directly after a trimBroad also predicted that there could be an error in the length of England in the headingley.“Hadingley has an electric-focus outfield-if you make a mistake in your length, the batsman just whispered,” Broad said.“If there are clouds, it can swing all around, but if you find it wrong, you disappear at the rate of lumps. We have also found an inexperienced young spinner. [Shoaib Bashir]So many are unknown. It rotates in the headingley, so there is no chance that they do not choose their expert spinner. ,
England Fast-Bauling Consultant Tim Southee defended the decision of skipper Ben Stokes, who first bowled on the dry headingley wicket.Stokes’s decision came for a sharp criticism of former captain Michael Vaughan, who said that he did not get any argument in the move.Southee said at the post-stump press conference, “Yesterday with the color of the wicket, and a little moisture left in it, if there was a little help, it was probably going to be this morning. It was the thinking behind the decision.”“You look at the surface and decide what you think that you will get the best chance. All the time you will not find it right.”