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Why India can stop England's juggernaut

Virat Kohli says India's wrist spinners can be the difference in ODI series against England ahead of World Cup next year

India skipper Virat Kohli is backing his wrist spinners to give his team the edge over a rampant England one-day international side on their upcoming tour of the UK.

"What's been the difference for us is the two X-factors we have in the middle overs," Kohli said, referring to Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav.

"We have actually been able to create flat wickets into wicket-taking wickets with the variety we have in the attack."

This is what "did the job" in India's recent 5-1 ODI series triumph in South Africa, Kohli said, with Chahal and Yadav sharing 33 wickets between them.

Image Id: C9E5490F8DF04152AEA4933056360D21 Image Caption: Kohli, Kuldeep and Chahal celebrate in South Africa // Getty

England are in fine form, however, and are currently one victory away from a 5-0 ODI whitewash against Australia after smashing some record-breaking batting totals.

This included a huge 6-481 at Trent Bridge earlier this week and chasing down an eminently respectable 310 with 32 balls to spare at Chester-le-Street on Thursday.

Batsmen in recent years have been helped by the use of two new balls in ODI cricket, a rule introduced in 2011, which former players believe has massively reduced the danger posed by reverse swing bowling late in an innings.

This has irked the likes of former England capital Michael Atherton and India legend Sachin Tendulkar, and Kohli agreed it has been "brutal" for the bowlers.

However the India captain, the second-ranked Test batsman in the world and the best in ODIs, didn't appear worried.

"If the pitch is flat then you have no way out unless you have wrist spinners who do the job in the middle overs," he said.

"Not every side has that cushion so they find it difficult."

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The Indian side will first play two Twenty20 internationals in Ireland, starting on June 27, before moving on to England for the next three months.

There India will play three T20 matches, three one-day internationals and five Tests, starting with a 20-over game in Manchester on July 3.

Kohli said that in the Tests, when the ball will swing for England danger-men James Anderson and Stuart Broad, India will fight fire with fire.

"The swinging ball has the tendency to trouble the best of batsmen. But then that helps our fast bowlers as well," the 29-year-old said.

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And he said that having the ODI series first will help.

"By the time the Test series arrives, we won't feel like we are playing an away series," Kohli said.

Kohli had an uncharacteristically ordinary spell during his last England tour in 2014, managing just 134 runs in 10 innings in the Test series.

But the top-order batsman, who pulled out of a county stint with Surrey this month after suffering a neck injury during the Indian Premier League, insisted that he is fit and raring to go.

He said he was "excited to get back to the field, which is rare in times when we play so much cricket."

The world's top Test side, often dominant at home but not so abroad, were lauded for their recent performance in South Africa.

After losing the first two Tests, India came back to win the third five-day match and ODI and T20 series to end on a high.

"This is an exciting time because what happened in South Africa we are actually looking forward to playing more difficult Test cricket," said Kohli.