Problem against wrist spinners is nothing new for an England side. When the wrist is rolled from the not so common left-arm, it becomes an even more alien territory for English batsmen, who are otherwise very comfortable in parking on the back foot and use the pace and bounce. England limited overs captain Eoin Morgan too conceded that they were "completely deceived" by Kuldeep Yadav’s trickeries but also made it clear that it was a one-off incident and that England would play him differently, read him better in the upcoming matches.


Kuldeep finished with exceptional figures of 5 for 24 at Old Trafford last night, a performance that played a crucial role in restricting England to 159 for 8, which India chased with eight wickets in hand for a 1-0 lead.


“I thought we got off to a brilliant start. Kuldeep bowled well but we know we can play him better than that. So between now and the next game, we need to assess our plans, make sure they are the right ones, and stick with them," Morgan said.


It certainly wasn’t the first time that England were found wanting against an Indian wrist spinner, las year, Yuzvendra Chahal had wrecked a havoc by picking up six wickets in the space of two overs in Bengaluru and like any good captain, Morgan hasn’t forgotten that.


"We weren't good enough in Bengaluru (when Yuzvendra Chahal took 6-25 in February 2017). But that was a different game. It was different today. Kuldeep took three wickets in four balls and deceived us. It wasn't a case of us chipping the ball up in the air. He completely deceived us and I thought he bowled well," acknowledged Morgan.


Kuldeep's scalps included three wickets in his third over when he had Morgan (7) caught in the deep and Jonny Bairstow and Joe Root stumped by MS Dhoni for golden ducks.


Morgan called on the England middle-order to take a leaf out of Jos Buttler's book in how to play spinners.


"That's the hardest part about batting -- starting against a spinner so we have to face more deliveries off him. Jos was playing him (Kuldeep) better but he had probably already faced 35 balls before he came on to bowl," he said.


"Jos is a magnificent player of spin. If you go back and analyse how Alex Hales and Jos played him, it was actually pretty smart. They didn't give him chances. They didn't necessarily get away, but acknowledged he was bowling well. Then I looked to take on the short side, and it didn't work. Then he got two of our guys out,” Morgan added.


Asked what kind of different approach England batsmen can take to play Indian wrist spinners going ahead in the series, Morgan replied, "It's like any other challenge. If you are facing someone who bowls 95mph, it is very difficult to replicate.


"If you're facing a guy who turns it both ways, and disguises it well, it's very difficult to replicate -- because there is nobody else who bowls like that. So you have to have a pretty clear plan, and stick to it."


England were just coming off a 6-0 blanking of Australia across ODIs and T20Is. But the hosts found India too hot to handle.


India completely dominated the game with KL Rahul scoring 101 not out off 54 balls to romp home with consummate ease.


In fact, India were even better in the field, so much so that Morgan was left lamenting half-chances missed by his teammates.


"They played our spinners in smaller margins. It could have gone the other way if we had taken our half chances, like Chris Jordan on the boundary, or if Rahul got caught at point early in the innings. Then it would have been a completely different game," Morgan said.


"He (Rahul) played extremely well and I don't think anybody found batting as easy as he did today.


We have been talking in the lead-in, how this series and the next two weeks will be completely different (from the Australia series). We talked about every game in this series potentially feeling like an away game.


"They (Indian) are a strong side, a really strong side," he signed off.