Wright: The first evening was crucial
Rex Clementine - 17 August 2001
Indian coach John Wright singled out the happenings on the first
evening as the turning point in the first Test against Sri Lanka which
India lost by 10 wickets early Friday morning. "Those couple of late
wickets in the first evening were crucial. That took the game away
from us. We should have at least put up 250 which would have been a
competitive score," said the New Zealand born Wright who is with the
Indian side on a one-year contract.
Wright praised the Sri Lankan attack, "It's a balanced attack and
their bowlers bowled well right from the start to make things
difficult for us."
The Indian bowlers, for their part, though failed
to deliver the goods when the Lankans were batting. "It makes things
difficult for the captain when you've got the best square cutter in
the middle and the bowlers keep on feeding him in his favourite area,
" Wright observed.
But he was hopeful that the side would bounce back in Kandy. "We have been in situations such as this before and we got to fight our way back." He though admitted that restoring parity was not going to be an easy task for his team. "Sri Lanka are a difficult side to beat."
Muttiah Muralitharan once again was the wrecker-in-chief with a five-
wicket haul in the Indian second innings. He claimed eight in the
match.
Wright says his batsmen have to be more positive in handling
the Sri Lankan off-spinner. "They have to play their natural game and
back themselves. But I don't think that there's any secret formula to
play Muralitharan. You can't say you got to play this way. You got to
be positive against everyone and not to be intimidated by his
reputation."
However Indian captain Sourav Ganguly took a different view on the subject, "Lot of players in this squad with the exception
of me and Rahul are facing him for the first time. So they've got no
experience on how to handle him"
Ganguly also paid tribute to the Sri Lankan team, "The Sri Lankans
played really well. They came up with a good all round performance."
Ganguly, like Wright before him, blamed the batsmen for coming up with
a pathetic performance, "After that opening partnership between Ramesh
and Das we just didn't bat well. The middle order failed and 187 was
never going to be enough"
The skipper himself was dismissed by fast bowler Dilhara Fernando on
two occasions in this game as his poor form with the bat continued. "I
have to score runs. I have scored four hundreds previously against
this side. I am making mistakes and getting out. I got a bad decision
in the first innings. I got a bad decision in the first Test in
Zimbabwe too. But this is part and parcel of game. I have been trying
to do everything and I just need to spend sometime in the middle."
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