England spinner Charlie Dean says the rise in scrutiny the group has confronted since a tough winter is a constructive factor for his or her recreation.
Dean, 24, was a part of the England squads that have been knocked out of the T20 World Cup on the group stage by West Indies final yr and subsequently thrashed 16-0 by Australia within the Ladies’s Ashes.
However talking after Nat Sciver-Brunt’s aspect hammered South Africa in their Women’s World Cup opener on Friday, Dean says they’re turning into “more durable” from the experiences.
“We have had challenges, and the best way you get round these is with resilience,” Dean informed BBC Sport.
“We had little bit of scrutiny on us and that may solely be a great factor – it means persons are watching.”
Dean added England are adopting a “more durable” and “actually constructive” strategy she feels helps the aspect get their “mojo” again.
Within the Ashes fallout England have been criticised for his or her health and attitudes on and off the sector, however the 10-wicket thrashing of the Proteas felt like an announcement win below the management of Sciver-Brunt and coach Charlotte Edwards.
Linsey Smith starred with three wickets, whereas Dean took 2-14 on a Guwahati pitch that supplied loads of help for the spinners, however Dean is cautious about getting carried away after such a complete victory.
“Bowling a group out for below 100 is one thing that you just at all times try to do, however you by no means actually suppose it may occur,” added Dean.
“So to start out like that in a World Cup is implausible however we’re being actually goal with our reflections – there’s at all times issues that you are able to do higher. It isn’t going to occur that rapidly each recreation.”
England tackle Bangladesh – who they’ve solely confronted as soon as in a one-day worldwide on the final World Cup in 2022 – of their second recreation in Guwahati on Tuesday, earlier than travelling to Colombo for fixtures in opposition to Pakistan and Sri Lanka.