SPORTS

Kohli aware of Pakistan's surprise factor

Source:PTI
June 03, 2017 20:46 IST

'As a team, I think, yeah, they (Pakistan) can surprise you because, as you said, you don't play against them so much'

'Bowling combination is a good headache to have'

IMAGE: For Kohli, getting the bowling combination right is a good headache to have. Photograph: Peter Cziborra/Reuters

India captain Virat Kohli has termed the worry about getting a perfect bowling combination in place for the match against Pakistan on Sunday ‘a good headache to have’.

"I think that's been on my mind in the last five or six days. The most out of anything else, you know who to play, because in both the (warm-up) games all the guys have bowled beautifully and the attack looks really balanced. But how they come into the equation, as apart from an all-rounder, you can only play four bowlers," Kohli said at the pre-match press conference on Saturday.

"There are all kinds of possibilities -- two spinners, two fast bowlers, three fast bowlers, Hardik and a spinner. So we will see what the wicket is like and what we feel is going to match up well against the opposition. The intensity was right up there (during warm-ups), and that's something that was really nice to see for me as a captain. It's a good headache to have," said Kohli.

Clichéd it may sound, Kohli finds an Indo-Pak match just like any other match.

"Nothing different, to be honest. I know it sounds pretty boring, but this is exactly what we feel as cricketers. We are not saying anything different to what we feel. And for us it's a matter of executing what we know best regardless of who we are playing against. And I'm sure every team thinks like that."

He added: "So in a tournament like this, you can't pick and choose, and in general cricketers don't pick and choose. We prepare the same way and we take the same mindset into every game that we play for India.

"And as I've said before, you need to be 100 per cent motivated playing for the country regardless of who you're playing with. So yeah, the mindset does not change."

Kohli agreed that since India do not play Pakistan regularly, there could be an element of surprise but players should be equipped to react to the situation.

"As a team, I think, yeah, they (Pakistan) can surprise you because, as you said, you don't play against them so much. But you know of their abilities. So you are not too aware of how they react in different situations. All you can do in that situation is focus on your skill, which anyway you should do as a team," he said.

IMAGE: Virat Kohli believes that no total is safe in ODI cricket. Photograph: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images

As a part of the preparation process, Kohli believes in keeping it simple while some others do their homework watching videos.

"As individuals, some people like to watch videos and go through bowlers and batsmen and all that. Some people don't. I personally don't. If a cricket ball has been bowled, you should be good enough to handle it, whether it's bowled by someone you play regularly or you don't."

Kohli loves the challenge from an unknown entity.

"You would rather take that up as a bigger challenge that you'll have to come up with the kind of bowling that you don't play often.

"And you have to test yourself against that kind of attack and say ‘I'm going to come out on top and, you know, prove to myself how good I can be when surprises like these come along’," Kohli said.

Kohli termed both Edgbaston and Oval wickets as good strips.

"When we played at The Oval, I think it was a little bit different from Birmingham. The game I saw yesterday (Australia vs NZ), the ball was coming on pretty nicely," he said.

"The bowlers found it difficult, and that's why I think they had different fields right in the Powerplay at the beginning of the game.

"So that becomes a big factor in terms of, especially the bowling attack, where you're going to execute what you want to and how to contain the batsmen. I don't think in shorter format cricket any total is safe in this day and age," he explained. 

Source: PTI
© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.

Recommended by Rediff.com

NEXT ARTICLE

NewsBusinessMoviesSportsCricketGet AheadDiscussionLabsMyPageVideosCompany Email