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England wicketkeeper Jos Buttler takes part in a training session the day before the start of the third cricket test of the series between England and India at The Ageas Bowl in Southampton, England. Image Credit: AP

Southampton, United Kingdom: Alastair Cook shrugged off calls from Kevin Pietersen to resign as England captain ahead of the third Test against India at Southampton.

Pietersen used his Daily Telegraph column published on Saturday to say he was only still in the job because it would be “yet another PR disaster” for the England and Wales Cricket Board to sack him now.

Cook has faced repeated calls to resign the captaincy from the likes of Michael Vaughan and Nasser Hussain during a run that has seen England go 10 Tests without a win.

Meanwhile, Cook’s form with the bat has also declined. It is now 27 innings since he scored the last of his England record 25 Test hundreds, and the left-handed opener’s last nine Test innings have yielded just 129 runs.

But Cook, speaking at Southampton, where England will start Sunday’s match 1-0 down in the five-Test series following India’s 95-run win at Lord’s last week, insisted once again he would not resign.

“The last three or four weeks, everyone’s been saying that. It is no different who else says it,” Cook told reporters at Southampton on Saturday when asked about Pietersen’s comments.

“I’ve just got to stay true to myself and say how good it would be if I could get through this as a person, as a player, as a leader and take huge strides from it,” the 29-year-old added.

“I’m desperate to carry on because I love being England captain, it’s a huge honour.

“I said when I first took over ‘I just want to throw everything into it’ and until that time where I don’t feel as if I can carry on doing it or someone taps me on the shoulder then that’s what I’m going to to do.”

If England lose the third Test, they will be unable to win the series against India, having already been beaten 1-0 in a two-Test contest this season at home to Sri Lanka.

Not since 2001, when they drew with Pakistan and lost to Australia, have England failed to win either of their series in a home season.

Cook insisted England could recover against India. “The good news in a five Test match series is you’ve got a chance to bounce back,” he said.

“The frustrating thing has been that we’ve been getting ourselves into situations, especially in the four Test matches, where we’ve been ahead of the game by quite a long way and haven’t been able to force that result.

“It’s bubbling under but the longer it goes without a win, it becomes harder and harder.”

Pietersen, despite being England’s all-time leading run scorer and their top contributor with the bat during their 5-0 Ashes thrashing in Australia, was the only player to be axed by England after their return home in February.

At the time, the ECB cited the need to support Cook’s captaincy as a reason for ditching Pietersen.

And South Africa-born Pietersen said: “At the moment only politics are keeping Cook in a job because the England and Wales Cricket Board backed him so much that it would be yet another PR disaster if it sacked him now.

“But the ECB needs his runs back more than anything else so a big decision has to be made,” he added.

“He [Cook] should do what is right for England and resign the captaincy. He has shown he does not have the tactical brain to lead the side,” Pietersen insisted.

“England badly miss Cook the opening batsman scoring 150 to set games up at the top of the order and, relieved of the captaincy, I don’t think it is too late for him to rediscover this form.”

Meanwhile, India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni says the decision by the International Cricket Council to fine Ravindra Jadeja 50 per cent of his match fee after an incident with England bowler James Anderson was “hurtful”.

Dhoni defended his teammate on Saturday, saying “there is an individual [Anderson] who has used foul language.”

He claimed Jadeja was pushed so hard by Anderson that “he barely gained his balance” as the teams went for lunch on day two of the first test at Trent Bridge.

The ICC fined Jadeja for a level one breach of “conduct contrary to the spirit of the game” but Dhoni says he “definitely” wants the decision to be appealed.

Anderson’s hearing for his more serious level three charge is August 1, when he could be banned for four Test matches.