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India have strong chance of success in England, says captain Virat Kohli

Virat Kohli
Image: Virat Kohli believes India have a strong chance of success in England

India have a strong chance against England in the upcoming Test series, according to captain Virat Kohli.

The tourists, currently the top-ranked Test team, will begin their trip by playing two Twenty20 matches against Ireland, starting June 27, before facing England in three T20s and three ODIs ahead of the five-Test series.

And Kohli believes having a month in the country to adjust to the conditions will stand India in good stead.

"We are looking forward to playing difficult cricket. That is the only way we can improve as a team," Kohli said on Friday. "We are looking to change the trend of teams not being good travellers. These are exciting times for Indian cricket."

India last travelled to England under MS Dhoni for a tour in 2014, when they lost the Test series 3-1, but India will look to make amends under Kohli.

India's captain Virat Kohli raises his bat and helmet as he celebrates scoring a century (100 runs) during the third day of the second Test cricket match b
Image: Kohli has led India to the top of the Test rankings

"The last time we played (in England) we felt that collectively as a team we didn't perform consistently in all three skills," said Kohli, who also said he was excited and fully fit for the tour.

"Because of that, the batsmen feel the extra pressure, or the bowlers feel the pressure because they feel batsmen aren't doing enough.

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"But yes, the conditions are going to be different, we will have to respect that. By the time the Tests come, we'll be so comfortable that we won't even feel like we'll be playing an away series."

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Kohli also commented on a call by former Indian batsman Sachin Tendulkar to scrap the rule allowing two new balls in ODIs to revive the moribund art of reverse swing in the format.

"I think [the current situation] is brutal for the bowlers," Kohli said. "I have played ODI cricket when there was only one new ball allowed and reverse swing used to be a massive factor in the latter half of the innings, which I think as a batsman was more challenging."

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