Cricinfo



Cricinfo Daily Newsletter

home


Cricinfo 3D

Audio

Video

Betting

Fantasy

Slogout

Help and Feedback


 





Live Scorecards
Fixtures | Results
3D Animation






England v New Zealand
West Indies v Australia
County Cricket 2008
Indian Premier League

Current and Future Tours



News
Photos | Wallpapers




Cricinfo Magazine








Match/series archive
Records
Statsguru
Players/Officials
Grounds



Women's Cricket
ICC
Rankings/Ratings



The Wisden Cricketer

Wisden Almanack



Games
Fantasy Cricket
Slogout



Daily Newsletter
Desktop Alerts
Toolbar







India can recover in time for World Cup - Ganguly

Lynn McConnell

January 14, 2003

India have enough time before the World Cup to recoup their forces and become a competitive unit in South Africa, according to skipper Sourav Ganguly.

Asked if there was time to prepare for the World Cup after the disappointments of this tour in which the Test series had been lost 2-0 and the one-day series 5-2, he said: "We had better. Instead of hoping that it would recover, we have to [recover]."

The side would go home for 10-11 days and have a break and then be refreshed to get their form going which would be the key to success at the World Cup.

"We have been to South Africa before where there have been runs scored, so it's not that it hasn't happened, but it has to happen again. The past has no meaning, it has to happen in the World Cup."

The players needed to be professional about their preparation and forget about the bad times they have had in this series and to look ahead because there were always good times and bad times in the game.

"We lost too many wickets with the new ball and did not put enough runs on the board to defend," he said of today's six-wicket loss in Hamilton.

While his bowlers had a bad today, Ganguly was loath to criticise them because they had a lot of work during the tour and they had bowled well.

He said there were some positives to come out of the tour because in the conditions it had been a learning process for all the batsmen.

"In tough conditions you have got to put your head together, the wickets were hard but that's no excuse.

"The techniques probably have to be a bit more tighter for all of us, we do play a lot of one-day cricket which makes the techniques fragile and we do play a lot of cricket so the mind factor is equally important," he said.

"These are wickets where you have to really concentrate hard, fight hard and show a lot of determination. They are not wickets where even if you make a minor mistake you will get away with it.

There was enough for the bowlers and every ball did enough to keep batsmen awake. But it hadn't happened as batsmen had got in but had just not carried on, throughout the tour.

Add to del.icio.us | digg this | Stumble It What's this?

NEW: West Indies v Australia fantasy cricket game
Enter your teams here
Live scores, results, news, features and more - just a click away
Download the Cricinfo Toolbar
Cricinfo on the go - our mobile services
WAP, Genie and Mobicast
Cricinfo home Print this page Email this page to a friend Feedback

Cricket Minute
Cricinfo Mobile


Related Links



Series/Tournaments

Teams






Cricinfo Products
Curtly Ambrose exclusive interview
Video on Cricinfo tv
NEW fantasy: WI v Aus
Enter/login here
Get a taste of the
2008 Wisden Almanack
Listen to news of the day in 60 seconds
Cricket Minute (Podcast)

Sponsored Links
Order the 2008 Wisden & get a free Cricinfo Guide
Special offer at Cricshop
Bet LIVE on Eng v NZ
and every IPL match
The latest rugby news & scores at Scrum.com
The perfect pitch for rugby
ESPN Soccernet - world's site for the world game
Global football coverage



 
Top 5 player searches
Most read stories