Dharamshala: Erstwhile England skipper Michael Vaughan feels that not all England players have fully adapted to the existing team culture and feels the backroom staff is "made up of cheerleaders".
Vaughan advised that Ben Stokes-led side must honestly review their 1-4 defeat in India by taking a leaf out of Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola's book to breed an environment of ruthlessness.
India won the bilateral Test series against England on Saturday, securing a victory in the fifth and final game of the series by an innings and 64 runs powered by skipper Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill's centuries and extraordinary display of bowlers', who dished out a clinical performance to help their team outplay the opponents and emerge triumphant.
"After a humbling series defeat in India, I strongly believe that a dose of honesty is the most important thing for this England team right now. I do worry it's a backroom team made up of cheerleaders. That's based on what I hear in public, and maybe it's different in the changing room, but players need challenging and questioning at times," Vaughan wrote in his column for Daily Telegraph.
"I don't believe they need to rip everything up. They are better at playing this way than they would be otherwise. I respect what they are trying to do, and get up early every day to watch them because they have me on the edge of my seat and I know something is going to happen. The great frustration is that they have the talent to be competitive all over the world but they have blown two big series and in this case it was because their batting failed miserably," Vaughan, who led the Test team from 2003-08, added.