Ganguly concerned over India's inability to dismiss tailenders
26 August 2001
Indian cricket captain Sourav Ganguly today praised his fast bowlers
for the discipline they showed in the second Test but said something
needed to be done about their seeming inability to polish off the
tail. "I think it is creating a bit of a problem for us. We will try
to do something about this (in the third Test) in Colombo," he said
referring to Muthiah Muralitharan's blistering knock of 67 which
enabled Sri Lanka to fight back from 157 for nine to 221 in their
second innings.
Ganguly rated his own match-winning knock of 98 as one of the better
ones and said his prolonged poor run with the bat had been hurting
him. "I think it is one of my better Test knocks because it helped
India win," Ganguly said referring to his brilliant knock which tool
India to a seven-wicket win in the second Test against Sri Lanka.
Ganguly, who had gone without a half-century in the last 13 innings in
a frustrating poor trot, finally got his act together and played a
brilliant innings yesterday. "The lack of runs was very upsetting,
especially since I am the captain," he said. Ganguly's scintillating
knock was blemished by two dropped catches but the Indian captain felt
it was only justified as he has had a number of hard decisions in the
recent past. "It's all equal now."
Meanwhile, Sri Lankan captain Sanath Jayasuriya refused to accept that
Kandy was a jinxed venue for his team which has lost the last three
matches on this ground. Every time they have squandered a 1-0 lead
taken in Galle. "We can't complain about this venue. Just because we
are not playing well, we can't put the blame on the venue," he said.
Jayasuriya insisted that it was below-par performance by the batsmen
that let the team down. "This is bound to happen if the batsmen are
not performing. We got a lead of 42 runs in the first innings and then
threw it away," said the captain who himself failed to impress scoring
three and six in the two innings.
He said the turning point of the match was when Sri Lanka lost four
wickets in the opening session on the third day and hoped that in the
deciding Test in Colombo, his team would come up with a performance
similar to the one in the first Test in Galle. "We have to play
positive cricket in Colombo, like we did in Galle. The batsmen have a
big responsibility," he concluded.
© PTI