'You can't judge people all the time on numbers, and whether they are succeeding or failing, that is not how you make a team.'
India skipper Virat Kohli backed under-fire wicketkeeper-batsman Rishabh Pant, saying the team management will give him all the space that he needs in the last two Tests of the five-match series against England.
The 23-year-old Pant, who has played in all the three Tests against England, hasn't been able to get going with the bat. He managed 25 in the first Test at Nottingham, 37 and 22 at Lord's, and 2 and 1 at Leeds to aggregate 87 runs in the five innings.
"Well again, as I said, with one loss I cannot assess that or I cannot start analysing that as a captain. Definitely the management is not going to start analysing that because we are not failing as a team.
"Consistently we are not losing, this is what I mean, when I say that, we failed this game as team definitely and we take responsibility for that," Kohli said on Saturday, when asked whether Pant's lack of runs is creating problems for the lower middle-order.
India were thrashed by an innings and 76 runs defeat by England in the third Test as pacer Ollie Robinson (5/65) ripped apart the visiting batting line-up in the second innings.
India were bundled out for 78 in the first innings while the hosts responded with 432 courtesy skipper Joe Root's 121.
"Similar conversations were being initiated about (Cheteshwar) Pujara as well, which seemed to have disappeared after yesterday, so we want to give, as I said in the past, Rishabh all the space to play his game and understand situations and take responsibility like it is expected of everyone else in the batting order," said Kohli.
According to Kohli, cricketers cannot be judged all the time on the basis of numbers.
"You can't judge people all the time on numbers, and whether they are succeeding or failing, that is not how you make a team.
"There is still time in this series. After two more Test matches, we can look back and reflect and analyse, okay these are the areas that were not quite right but at this moment, it's not the time," the skipper said.
Pujara, who was not among the runs prior to the third match, got back to form at Headingley with a fluent innings of 91, although in a losing cause.
"We are very pleased with how Cheteshwar batted this innings, outside noise, we don't know what's going on and we don't care. So that is none of our business.
"We know that he was playing well and it was just a matter of time, when he starts to find his rhythm again," Kohli quipped.
According to the skipper, the team does not analyse itself on the basis of numbers.
"Look this game has been kind of an aberration in how we have gone in this series, first two games, we put ourselves in positions where we won one game and we had the opportunity to win the first one as well.
"So we analyse ourselves as a team in terms of what situations we are putting ourselves in, not with numbers, that all happens on the outside.
"So, whether we are helping the team to build partnerships and are we putting the team in good positions, is our only focus and there is no connect between the focuses on the outside and focuses within the group," he said.
The fourth Test will be played at The Oval in London, from September 2-6.