Don’t keep chopping, changing till last minute; Settled combination key to winning WC: Ganguly
New Delhi [India], August 31 (ANI): Former BCCI president and India captain Sourav Ganguly knows very well how much pressure there can be on Rohit Sharma and Rahul Dravid in the forthcoming World Cup on Indian soil. Saying they are the best men for the job, Ganguly says India will start as favourites against Pakistan on home soil and in front of 110,000 Indian fans in Ahmedabad. “India will always be favourites on home soil. They have a very good side and if the fitness of the players are on track, they will always have a very good chance in home conditions. It will depend on how they play during the tournament and how the fast bowlers perform but that’s for everyone so as I said, India in home conditions will always have a strong chance,” said Sourav Ganguly on Backstage With Boria show.
Speaking on India Pakistan he said, “It is a huge game. Always was and always will be. You have realised how important it is in the context of the world cup. I used to treat it very much like an India Australia, India South Africa contest. I used to get into the mindset that it is still the red ball or the white ball you are up against and prepare myself like that. You can’t let the occasion get to you because that’s when you tend to lose focus.
” He went on to argue that players say India Pakistan is just another game to manage pressure while it is not. “No its not just another game. You have to prepare yourself that way. That’s how you manage pressure. Some manage and some don’t manage. In my tenure we had a great record against Pakistan but this time round it will be a more competitive game. Last year after Pakistan beat India in Dubai things have changed. Pakistan is also a very good side and it is amazing how they keep churning out extraordinary talent. But playing India in India, playing India in Ahmedabad and playing India in front of 110,000 fans is very different thing.
” Saying that India will not always win finals, he went on to say, “You won’t win all finals. But then you need to make it to the final first. So you need to break things down. First you need to play well and win the majority of the nine games to be able to make the final. Don’t think about the final at the start of the tournament. It is much like batting. When you go into bat don’t think of the 100. Get to 50, 60, 70 and then when you get to 90 that’s when you think of the 100. For the World Cup it is the same. First play well and get to the final.
Once you are there that’s when you plan for the final and try and win it.” Picking out Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill as the three key players for India in batting he said, “Virat is playing very well. He has looked very good in the last few months and is batting extremely well and will be India’s go to man along with Rohit Sharma. Rohit as captain is playing his first and last World Cup. I am speaking about the 50-over World Cup here which will come after 4 years. He could play T-20 but this is a different format. And he too has a superb record in world cups. 5 hundred in the last World Cup where he was brilliant. Finally, it is Shubman Gill who has that class to stand up and win matches for India. Each of them will have to stand up if India has to win the tournament.” He also picked Hardik Pandya as the game-changer.
“I keep saying this the coach, captain, selectors must convince Hardik Pandya to play Test cricket. His bowling might not be required in India but away from home, it balances the side out. He must play Test cricket away from home and bowl 10 overs a day. Hardik Pandya is very very important for India.” Comparing his own 2003 side with the current side, Sourav said, “We had a settled combination. That’s the most important thing. We were a very good team by then and had started winning. We were on song. We had some fantastic players. That’s why I keep saying don’t chop and change ahead of a major tournament.
Have a set of players together for 1 year and let them win or lose and get ready as a team. Australia did not chop and change for years between 1999-2003 and that’s why they were so good. For that one year in 2003, we had won everything. We won in the West Indies, won the Natwest and except the blip against New Zealand on those pitches, we won it all. We went to South Africa as a very good team. That’s why it is important that we have our 14 by the Asia Cup, the same 14-15 that will play the World Cup. It is key you know your combination and don’t keep chopping and changing till the last minute.”