7 Aug, 2024 10:30 AM, Wed
It's been seven days in Colombo for the India group and they are yet to enlist a success in the series. In addition, they head into the last round of the continuous visit through Sri Lanka with the chance of losing their most memorable respective series against their Asian neighbors in 27 years. It's not been the merriest of starts for Gautam Gambhir and Co. in the 50-over configuration, and a lot of that inconvenience has sprung up from the powerlessness to counter the Sri Lankan spinners in the center overs. In the two games, Rohit Sharma exploited the new ball and controlled India to blasting beginnings while pursuing genuinely low targets. Be that as it may, the Sri Lankan spinners guaranteed two batting implodes in two games - the primary consummation in a tie, and the second guaranteeing a 32-run win for the hosts. Washington Sundar, the Indian all-rounder, but protected the two misfortunes as a valuable chance to plan well for the greater games in greater competitions that are booked inside the following year. "Truly, we are quality players of twist," Sundar said. "We've generally played on these sorts of wickets even at home, even in Tests and in homegrown cricket too. We realize a great deal of our players have done well in the center request particularly while batting against turn. It is simply a question of tracking down a way in their own singular ways to attempt to take care of business." To put his point across and hype up the group's true capacity, he even depended on forceful marking. "Everybody realizes it is a difficult wicket and the Indian group generally puts its hands up when the test emerges. That is the point at which we have been generally excellent with both bat and ball and have turned out in flying varieties out of testing circumstances. That is the meaning of the Indian cricket crew throughout the past numerous years. "I think it has been a similar situation in this series too and it is just about finding a way exclusively and taking care of business. I think it is an extraordinary chance to do that tomorrow." In both the games, India batted second, slipping from 75 for no misfortune to 132 for 5 in the primary ODI and getting diminished from 97 for no misfortune to 147 for 6 in the second. Washington, in any case, denied there being any critical benefit for groups bowling second at the R Premadasa Arena pitch. "I feel it (the pitch) is comparable in the two innings. At night, perhaps the zip is a touch more and slides in at a faster speed yet I feel it is something very similar." A fascinating component of India's batting against turn in the second ODI was their refusal to utilize their feet against the tweakers, something that the lead trainer Gautam Gambhir did very well during his playing days. "He (Gambhir) was a great player of twist. We've generally seen him set up valiant exhibitions, particularly on such pitches against quality twist bowling. So clearly there has been a ton of contribution from him. That is one reason we came here today to practice and attempt to track down a way and attempt to do those little changes. "We're the best group, we simply have to set our hands up in those basic circumstances in the games. Tomorrow it's a chance for us to do precisely that and dominate the match. Clearly, with huge competitions coming up, we will be in such circumstances. It means a lot to track down ways of seeing how we might win those basic circumstances in comparable circumstances against quality twist assaults."
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | India | 122 | 5117 |
2 | Australia | 116 | 3936 |
3 | South Africa | 112 | 3357 |
4 | Pakistan | 106 | 2762 |
5 | New Zealand | 101 | 3349 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Babar Azam | 824 |
2 | Shubman Gill | 801 |
3 | V. Kohli | 768 |
4 | H.T. Tector | 746 |
5 | R.G. Sharma | 746 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | K.A. Maharaj | 716 |
2 | J.R. Hazlewood | 688 |
3 | A. Zampa | 686 |
4 | Mohammed Siraj | 678 |
5 | J.J. Bumrah | 665 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Mohammad Nabi | 320 |
2 | Shakib Al Hasan | 292 |
3 | Sikandar Raza | 288 |
4 | A. Vala | 248 |
5 | Rashid Khan | 239 |
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Australia | 124 | 3715 |
2 | India | 120 | 3108 |
3 | England | 105 | 3151 |
4 | South Africa | 103 | 1845 |
5 | New Zealand | 96 | 2121 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | K.S. Williamson | 859 |
2 | J.E. Root | 824 |
3 | D.J. Mitchell | 768 |
4 | Babar Azam | 768 |
5 | S.P.D. Smith | 757 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | R. Ashwin | 870 |
2 | J.J. Bumrah | 847 |
3 | J.R. Hazlewood | 847 |
4 | K. Rabada | 834 |
5 | P.J. Cummins | 820 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | R.A. Jadeja | 444 |
2 | R. Ashwin | 322 |
3 | Shakib Al Hasan | 310 |
4 | J.E. Root | 282 |
5 | J.O. Holder | 270 |
Rank | Team | Rating | Points |
---|---|---|---|
1 | India | 266 | 14108 |
2 | Australia | 256 | 10241 |
3 | England | 254 | 9660 |
4 | West Indies | 252 | 11604 |
5 | South Africa | 251 | 8287 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | T.M. Head | 844 |
2 | S.A. Yadav | 842 |
3 | P.D. Salt | 816 |
4 | Babar Azam | 755 |
5 | Mohammad Rizwan | 746 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | A.U. Rashid | 719 |
2 | Rashid Khan | 681 |
3 | P.W.H. De Silva | 674 |
4 | J.R. Hazlewood | 662 |
5 | A.J. Hosein | 659 |
Rank | Player Name | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | P.W.H. De Silva | 222 |
2 | Mohammad Nabi | 214 |
3 | H.H. Pandya | 213 |
4 | M.P. Stoinis | 211 |
5 | Sikandar Raza | 210 |
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