ENG v IND 2026: “Challenge is to accept we are underachieving…,” says Ryan ten Doeschate after India’s T20I series loss

The reigning T20 world champions have been outplayed in the ongoing UK tour.

Ryan ten Doeschate | BCCI

Team India succumbed to another humiliating defeat in the ongoing five-T20I series against England, going down by nine wickets in the penultimate match at Bristol on Thursday (July 9).

As a result, England sealed the series with an unassailable 3-0 lead. This debacle came after India suffered a 0-2 whitewash at the hands of Ireland under new captain Shreyas Iyer.

Speaking during the post-match press conference, India’s assistant coach Ryan ten Doeschate emphasized that the team’s biggest mental hurdle is acknowledging they have been underachieving in foreign conditions.

“We have spoken so much about adaptability, it’s easy to say we need to adapt, it’s easy to say but really it’s a point now where we need to understand the process, what is needed to make those adaptations,” Ten Doeschate told reporters.

“Psychologically and mentally the challenge for the group is to accept the fact that we are underachieving in foreign conditions and tell the players look there is a big prize two years down the line in Australia.”

The Dutchman stressed the importance of transitioning away from dominating on flat Indian pitches to mastering varied seam-friendly conditions overseas.

“Do we want be a team that smashes 250 in India and looks great hitting 80m six at Eden Gardens or do you want to come to places like Manchester, Southampton where things are slightly different and further down the line the MCG.

“Those were the places do we want to be the team to excel in different conditions and do we have the mentality to make those adjustments. That’s the mental challenge and that’s we need the players to take that on,” he added.

The Indian batters struggled on seam-friendly, bouncy tracks of Ireland and England after playing mostly on flat Indian wickets, and Ten Doeschate said quick adjustments is key to excel in foreign pitches.

“I think Jofra (Archer) and (Josh) Tongue bowled exceptionally well and we haven’t made that adjustment as much as we have spoken about it, we have spoken about the need to evolve and what works in India won’t necessarily work here.

“We just haven’t quite managed to shift from that mindset where we read on whether we are really strong on good wickets and the little adjustments that were needed. I think all the three wickets were little slower, had a little bit of bounce. You can’t play the same way, we trying to address but at the same time our performance have been really poor,” he said.

Ryan ten Doeschate credited skipper Shreyas Iyer for his heavy run-scoring amid an otherwise disappointing UK tour.

“The majority of those guys won a World Cup four months ago, one of the guys (Shreyas Iyer) who wasn’t there is scoring heavy runs. But it is disappointing as it has been, it’s really just to take learnings from these games, keep trusting the players and give them that runway given what they have done for the country in the past.”

The assistant coach further stated that India didn’t get enough preparation time for the tour with a busy schedule back home.

“Ideally you want to prepare longer for a series but again we came from a series in India. I think I mentioned in the past about balancing freshness and being fair on the players as well, make sure they get to spend a little bit of time at home after World Cup, IPL and then the Afghan series and then we coming here and get four, five days practice is not ideal but one of the takeaways from what you have seen so far is preparation for different conditions is really important.

“Mentally you have to be prepared to make that shift, ideally you have to identify things that work in one area don’t necessarily work elsewhere. You need to be open to make those changes a lot quicker than we have done in the last 2-3 weeks,” Ten Doeschate said.

He threw his weight behind Iyer, saying the T20I captain is leading the charge with the bat but needs support from teammates to shine as a captain.

“He is one the guys who has exploited the ability to use the crease and that’s how you have to play in these condition. He has batted really well in all three innings. But again I don’t want to stand and defend the players and also be over critical but the onus is on the players to have the mindset to accept that the fact it’s really going badly and look at the evidence in front of them.

“Shreyas is a fantastic leader and age wise if you are looking at two years down the line in Australia you have to make some really tough calls, there is going to millions of opinions about it. The immediate backlash of transitioning to a new captain after losing two games against Ireland and 3-0 down in England, I think it isn’t very good. It is important to look at things a little realistically,” Ten Doeschate said.

In the end, Ryan ten Doeschate said the return of world-class all-rounder Hardik Pandya and premier fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah will significantly boost the team's flexibility and depth.

“We have made a few changes to the squad we brought here; Hardik and Jasprit make a big difference to the team. We have got a slightly different squad with different weapons, and we need to give Shreyas a little bit of time to grow into that role and the players to adapt to his captaincy style as well. He started really well, leading from the front with the bat. I think he will get his just rewards as a captain,” he concluded.

India will look to finish the series on a high in the fifth and final T20I at Southampton on Saturday (July 11).

(With PTI Inputs)

 
 

By Salman Anjum - 10 Jul, 2026

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