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If there's one word to describe this Indian cricket team - Virat Kohli's Indian cricket team - resilient would be very high on the list.
Like its skipper, this side has developed a thick skin and there was no better illustration of it than when India, trailing 2-0 in the three-match Test series in South Africa, roared back to win the final match in Johannesburg.
It was a terrific performance, full of character and determination, that came at the conclusion of a tough tour that had seen them compete hard in alien, seaming conditions against a stellar bowling attack boasting the like of Kasigo Rabada, Vernon Philander and Morne Morkel.
Australia's hammering on those shores only a few weeks later put into perspective just how much India had achieved on their own tour and despite losing at Edgbaston last week, it is hard to imagine India staying down for long. Kohli, for one, just won't allow it.
On the face of it, last week's loss is a result that will have stung India hard. They dominated much of the game and when they reduced England to 87-7 in the second innings, would have been confident of wrapping up a comfortable victory.
Sam Curran's late-order heroics ensured that wasn't to be but India still appeared firmly in control when Kohli had brought the target to within 50-odd on the fourth morning.
However, an inspired Ben Stokes had the final say, removing Kohli before running through the Indian lower order to haul England over the line and break Indian hearts.
Rohit Sharma's exclusion from the India squad for the first three games deprives Kohli of a potential match winner but his own battling was peerless in the first Test and he should continue to prosper with conditions unlikely to be as testing as those he encountered there.
Murali Vijay performed well here back in 2014 and won't stay quiet for long, while Dinesh Karthik and Hardik Pandya both did enough in Birmingham to think they can offer Kohli and his top-order colleagues plenty of support in the rest of the series.
A Lord's Test match has the potential to inspire the tourists even further but for England, they won't have happy memories of their last visit to the 'home of Cricket', having been humbled by Pakistan there earlier in the summer.
They must do without Ben Stokes - the hero at Edgbaston - this week due to his ongoing court case and his likely replacement, Chris Woakes, had missed plenty of cricket himself of late due to various injury issues.
Pope's debut and the continued struggles of the opening pair place even more burden on the shoulders captain Joe Root and as such, England could be vulnerable against a resilient Indian side who traded blows with the hosts in the series opener and might have fewer concerns in their camp heading into the second Test.
Just as they did back in 2014, they can win at Lord's and get themselves back into a series that has already delivered so much.