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Early start
may favour bowling team
Guwahati—Six months ago, India and Pakistan were coming to terms with
their early World Cup exits. All seemed to have been forgotten when, a
little over a month ago, they battled for the World Twenty20 title. Then
Australia came to India and South Africa to Pakistan. And both sides are
back to learning from their mistakes. It’s these glorious cycles that
grips both nations.
Surely it allows the teams to understand each other, as evinced by the
camaraderie this evening. Once both sides finished warming up, Harbhajan
Singh and Shoaib Akhtar, standing close to the pitch for close to 20
minutes, seemed to be discussing life, the universe and everything.
Yuvraj Singh and Mohammad Yousuf greeted each other like long, lost
brothers. And Sourav Ganguly couldn’t get enough of watching Sohail
Tanvir’s wrong-footed action. Such dosti.
Geoff Lawson recently said that an India-Pakistan series is “bigger than
the Ashes” but Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Shoaib Malik, the captains in
charge, claimed otherwise. “It’s like playing any other team,” Dhoni
said casually. Maybe for you guys [the media] it’s bigger than the
Ashes. But personally it doesn’t matter if it’s Australia, Bangladesh,
Pakistan, Zimbabwe or any other team. Also, we’ve played against
Pakistan a lot recently. It eases the pressure.”
Team talk Sreesanth, while bowling at the nets in the eastern side of
the ground, came perilously close to making news. A swinging yorker
crashed into Sourav Ganguly’s right ankle and had him hobbling. A quick
spray and a ginger massage later, Ganguly was smiling again, going on to
have a bowl.
If he plays, which he should, the problem could arise at No.3. Gautam
Gambhir or Virender Sehwag? Recent form points to Gambhir, past record
to Sehwag. Dhoni said it was a toss-up between the two, adding that
Sehwag, despite losing his father a few days back, was in “good nick”.
The short square boundaries could dissuade India from playing two
spinners, though the pitch could aid turn later on. “This is one of the
grounds where we could have extended the boundary ropes,” Dhoni said.
“It’s quite a small ground, and both sides have spinners who will have a
big impact on the game. Definitely they will suffer a bit if it turns
out to be a flat wicket. A 60-65 yard outfield is worrying for bowlers.”
Pakistan, though, might go with two spinners irrespective - both Abdur
Rehman and Shahid Afridi troubled South Africa recently. “I don’t think
our spinners will struggle in these type of grounds,” Malik said. “We
had tried different combinations in the series against South Africa, and
that was partly keeping the series against India in mind,” said Malik.
“Now, we have an idea about the combination and I am confident that we
have players for every role.”—Agencies |