India
hope for batting pitches in one-dayers
Hamilton,
December 23: India, with their batting pride badly battered
and bruised in a recent Test series against New Zealand, hope
the pitches do not dictate terms in the upcoming one-dayers against
the hosts.
"I just
hope we have very good batting wickets for one-dayers," Indian
coach John Wright said before the team's departure for Auckland
for Thursday's opening one-dayer.
India, who
lost the two-Test series 2-0 here on Sunday, will play seven one-dayers
hoping to salvage their reputation with a vastly-improved batting
performance in the shorter version of the game.
Their batting
was so brittle in Tests on seamer-friendly tracks that they failed
to cross the 200-mark in four innings despite having quality players
in Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and skipper Sourav Ganguly.
Batting genius
Tendulkar and reliable Dravid both have scored more than 1,000
Test runs this year, but neither could do justice to his stature
against the New Zealand pace attack on seaming wickets.
The tourists
lost the opening Test at Wellington by 10 wickets and the second
here by four -- both inside three days -- as India were blanked
for the first time in a Test series under Ganguly's captaincy.
Only Dravid
and Tendulkar managed to compile half-centuries in two Tests as
India scored 161, 121, 99 and 154 in their four innings in one
of their most disappointing batting shows in recent years.
"You
haven't seen the best of our batsmen," said Wright whose
side has been strengthened with the arrival of fast bowler Javagal
Srinath, leg-spinner Anil Kumble and all-rounder Yuvraj Singh
for the one-day seires.
"Their
style and attacking brand of cricket have yet to be seen on the
tour. I hope the New Zealand public gets the opportunity to see
that in seven one-dayers," he said.
The Indian
coach said it was essential for both India and New Zealand to
play on good pitches here in their last one-day series before
the World Cup, starting in South Africa next February.
"I think
it is very important (to have batting wickets) for both the sides
heading into the World Cup. We want to go there with batsmen in
form and I imagine our opposition also wants the same," said
Wright.
"Our
preparations for the World Cup will depend on how batsmen-friendly
pitches are in this series. You should be able to put up big scores
and I think New Zealand will also be thinking along the same lines.
"It'll
probably be wise and that's what we are looking for in this one-day
series."
The local
press criticised the quality of Test pitches, especially the one
at the Westpac Park here where 22 wickets fell on Saturday in
a sensational day of Test cricket.
"It
was not so much a Test match as a low-grade farce, starring an
Indian side who had effectively been nobbled by New Zealand's
desire to play on wickets that would not so much advantage themsleves,
but disadvantage the opposition," said the New Zealand Herald.
"The
lasting impression from this Test series will be the substandard
pitches that India were forced to bat on and the subsequent drop-off
in the quality of cricket," the paper said.
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