Not a natural leader, admits Joe Root ahead of captaincy debut
He, however, said that the time spent under former skipper Alastair Cook has groomed him for the responsibility.
Joe Root took over as England captain after Alastair Cook, who led the side for a record 59 Tests, stepped down from the post following his side's humiliating 0-4 defeat at the hands of India in the five-match series.
"I wouldn't say I'm necessarily a natural leader but becoming more senior within the side and being vice-captain over the last few years will definitely help in that respect," Root was quoted as saying by Sport24.
While Root, who has now become
"A balance of those two and someone like Mike Brearley... the way he was able to manage so many big characters, all in one dressing room, and get the best out of them, turn a series around against Australia (in 1981)," he said.
The right-handed batsman further said he would always trust his instinct besides being thorough in preparation when they face the Proteas in the first Test at Lord's on July 6.
"I want it to be quite natural, not have all these grand plans in place and then something change or not go to plan and then feel like you're back to square one. I want to be quite instinctive with it from the start," he added.
"I think being instinctive has been one of my big strengths as a player, as a batsman, and I think it would be silly not to go with something that has served me so well in other departments," he continued.
After the four-match Test series against the Proteas,