MS Dhoni, India's limited-overs captain, disagreed with his
counterpart Carlos Brathwaite's statement that certain sections of the
outfield didn't show any discernible improvement after an incessant
15-minute thunderstorm resulted in the second Twenty20 International
(T20I) played at the Central Broward Regional Park Stadium Turf Ground
in Lauderhill to be called off, with the visitors well placed at 15 for 0
in chase of 144.
The 35-year-old Indian captain cited the
One-Day International (ODI) leg of India's tour of England in 2011 where
the visitors had apparently played in worse conditions as an example to
illustrate his point.
"What the umpires told us was that
there was not adequate equipment over here and the condition of it
(ground) was quite bad, so because the conditions wouldn't improve we
won't be able to play a game," Dhoni told reporters after the second
T20I was washed off on Sunday (August 28). "That's a call that the match
officials have to make. I've played close to 10 years of international
cricket and frankly I've played under worse conditions.
"If I
remember in 2011, the whole ODI series that we played in England, it was
literally playing under the rain. Ultimately the umpires decide, so
they decide you play, we play. If they say okay it was unfit for play,
it was unfit for play," he observed.
The downpour had also
left a few puddles on the west side of the ground, near the inner
circle. Dhoni, on his part, pointed out that those puddles hadn't formed
anywhere near the bowler's run-up. "It was on this [west] side where me
and Bravo were standing but it was far away from all the run-ups of the
bowlers. There is no Shoaib Akhtar in their team so I don't think it
was a big concern."
When asked about the Indian team's
impressive performance in the second T20I after they slipped to a
gut-wrenching one-run defeat in the first game, Dhoni praised the
well-executed all-round show by the bowlers. He also indicated that
picking another spinner in the form of Amit Mishra helped the Indian
setup skittle out the Caribbean side for a modest total of 143.
"I
don't think the wicket changed a lot. It is same as the last wicket. It
is the exposure that they had in the last game, it gave them the
ability to go back and think about their own game plan and often when
there is no break between two matches, it actually helps the bowlers to
quickly go back and plan.
"It is the execution that matters
and I think it was great. Addition of a spinner also paid off well.
Mishra bowled really well. I felt it was the whole bowling unit that
restricted them to 140 odd, it was a brilliant effort," Dhoni noted.
Dhoni also reckoned that the Indian Test side was shaping up well, and sees the battery of fast bowlers as an asset.
"I
think the Indian Test team is shaping up well. If you notice, for the
last two and a half years, we have had the same batting unit, barring
one or two changes. So you learn a lot. Test remains the ultimate
format," he said.
"On top of it, one plus point is that all
our fast bowlers are fit now and the way they are bowling. We have 10
proper fast bowlers and it's an asset. Now we will be playing a lot of
matches, so we can rotate our fast bowlers if we want to," Dhoni summed
up.
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