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November
12
Rain adds to India's woes
ahead of one-dayer
RAJKOT, India: Unseasonal rain washed out India's final
preparations Monday ahead of the crucial third one-day
international against the buoyant West Indies, when the
home side will be looking to halt a run of two straight
defeats.
Sourav Ganguly's home side, beaten in the first two
matches, need a win on Tuesday to have a realistic
chance of keeping their hopes alive in the seven-game
series.
Heavy early morning rain washed away the practice
session for both teams on Monday. The skies cleared by
afternoon, but the ground was too wet to allow the
players even light training. "The teams obviously
do not want to have injuries before an important
match," said organiser Niranjan Shah, a former
secretary of the Indian cricket board.
India, who won the Test series 2-0, have struggled to
forge a winning team in the absence of star batsman
Sachin Tendulkar and seamer Zaheer Khan, both of whom
were rested for the series due to niggles.
The bowling, specially the spinners, appears to be a
major worry after the West Indians sucessfully chased
283 in the first one-dayer at Jamshedpur and 279 in the
second at Nagpur. West Indian captain Carl Hooper rubbed
the point in, saying his counterpart Ganguly must have a
"headache" because of the failure of frontline
spinners Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh to stem the
run-rate.
"The worry for the Indians is that not only these
fine bowlers have failed to take wickets, they have also
gone for runs," Hooper wrote in his column for the
Press Trust of India.
"They are the leading Indian bowlers, yet have gone
for five-six runs an over. It is not easy to replace
them either. It is difficult to opt for such an extreme
option." India may opt for all-rounder Sanjay
Bangar, a useful medium-pacer, in place of either Kumble
or Harbhajan, but the playing eleven will be named only
after a close look at the conditions before the toss.
Hooper said he was wary of an Indian backlash in the
remaining five matches and warned his team against being
complacent.
"India are good enough to come back any time,"
he said. "But they have played a lot of cricket in
this past few months and a few of them could be jaded.
"But it is no excuse for losing matches. The team
needs to find its own motivation to stop a downward
slide. Nobody accepts failure these days." Hooper
said he was delighted to be 2-0
up in the series.
"We are happy at this marvellous start to the
one-day series," he said. "Our batting is
beginning to jell well and it would look still better
when Brian Lara is back."It looks to be a good
nucleus for the World Cup. Barring an injury or two, we
are in the process of identifying the men we will need
for the World Cup."
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