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Bell eyes regular spot in England ODI team



London: England batsman Ian Bell has said he is desperate to cement his place in the one-day team.
Bell has missed the first two ODIs against India in the ongoing five-match series, both of which England lost.
"I've never really had that clarity of what I need to go out and do. I'm experienced enough to know how to go out and play one-day cricket, but I still don't feel I know 100 percent what my role is," he said.
"I'm desperate to get up the order. If anyone asked me, I'd want to bat in the top three. But one of my strengths but also one of my problems is that I'm quite flexible. I can start against spin, I can start against the new ball."
"So I've become that kind of player: 'He can bat at six, four or he can open.' Whereas others probably occupy specialist positions. In my 100-odd one-day internationals, I haven't had a long string of games in one position. I've chopped and changing all the time," he said.
Meanwhile, Bell also publicly thanked India for recalling him after a controversial run-out during the Trent Bridge Test in August.
Bell, who could turn out against India for the third ODI in Mohali, admitted that he made a mistake during the Trent Bridge Test by walking off assuming that ball was dead. Initially he was given out, but later was recalled by India.
"It was an honest mistake. It was wrong to assume the ball was dead, and just to walk off was my fault. But, yes, I'm obviously grateful. If I could go back in time and the situation was different, I'd do it differently," Bell was quoted as saying by the Daily Mail.
"I hope people understand that things like that happen in cricket. I think something similar happened to VVS Laxman in the West Indies and he wasn't called back, and the Indians were really annoyed about that," he said.
"But they wouldn't have changed the decision if they didn't think it was the right thing for the game. Hopefully we can just move on," said Bell.

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