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Kohli looks to county to build England form

India captain's dire record in England has him looking for a domestic gig ahead of blockbuster five-Test series

Virat Kohli says he is keen to play county cricket in a bid to adapt to conditions on English soil ahead of India's tour of the country later this year.

The Indian skipper – the second-ranked Test batsman in the world and the best in one-day internationals – endured a dismal spell during the England tour in 2014.

Kohli managed just 134 runs in 10 innings, a far cry from his average 53.40 over 66 Tests, including 21 centuries, that earned him the moniker "King Kohli".

He wants to avoid a repeat of his poor form in English, and plans to train there to prepare for India's tour starting July.

"Playing county cricket will help me improve my game," the 29-year-old batsman told Indian TV channel NDTV.

"I think it makes things more challenging and more competitive and there are no guarantees whether you are going to do well even if you go in advance.

"It's just about giving yourself more opportunity to get used to the conditions that you are not used to.

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The all-important series will see India play England in three Twenty20 matches, three ODIs and five Tests.

It has been widely reported in Indian press that Kohli would join English county side Surrey for a brief stint in June.

Surrey's director Alec Stewart had expressed interest in signing Kohli after reports the Indian cricket board would allow their top batsman to skip a one-off Test against Afghanistan starting June 14.

Kohli had stressed the need for getting used to local conditions after India, the world's top Test team, lost a series to South Africa 2-1 in January.

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"If players get an opportunity then why not," he said of Indians taking whatever chances they get to hit abroad.

The link with Surrey follows news the county, coached by former Australia assistant Michael Di Venuto, would be open to recruiting banned trio Steve Smith, David Warner and Cameron Bancroft.

"From an Australian perspective, it is probably important that they play a bit of cricket at some stage," Di Venuto said this week.

"I don't know if they are allowed to play in this competition. I know what it states in their sanctions that they can't play domestic cricket in Australia.

"We have got a relationship with Mitch (Marsh, the Australia allrounder recovering from ankle surgery) to see how he goes with his ankle but we have got a spot we have got to fill as well.

"So, if they are in the right mental state to play cricket and the ECB will have to allow it to start with, then we'd be mad not to look at some of the world's best players potentially playing."

But speculation of Kohli's debut in county cricket has rubbed some the wrong way.

Image Id: 23CE1306302E42079E5D2771DD72AF94 Image Caption: Kohli averaged 13.4 on his last Test trip to England // Getty

Former England paceman Bob Willis said England risked losing Test matches at home if "we're accommodating all these visiting players".

"I can't stand overseas players in county cricket," he told Sky Sports.

"The only way to improve our Test team is to have as many England-qualified players playing in the County Championship as possible.

"Instead, they're going to pay Kohli, presumably, five figures a match so he can hone his skills in English conditions before a Test series. It's a nonsense."