India will stick to the same batting line-up: Ganguly
10 March 2001
Indian captain Sourav Ganguly said in Kolkata on Saturday that the team
will stick to the same batting line-up in the second Test beginning at the
Eden Gardens tomorrow despite the top order failing to come good against
the formidable Australians in the Mumbai Test.
"Batting is our strength and we will stick to the same batting order for
the Eden Test," Ganguly told reporters before the team's practice session.
"The track appears to favour the batsmen, it's flat. It looks a good one,"
he said. Expressing happiness over the Eden track, Ganguly denied that he
had been trying to influence pitch preparations against the Aussies. "A lot
of stories are coming out in the press. We play on wickets given to us. I
do not give any instructions to the curators," he said.
The Indian captain said the absence of leg spinner Anil Kumble and pace
spearhead Javagal Srinath had been a setback for the team which has to
learn to perform without their key bowlers.
"You cannot go on depending on Anil and Srinath for years. Their absence
affords a very good opportunity for the youngsters to rise to the occasion
and deliver," he said.
On his personal form, Ganguly who could manage just eight runs in the two
innings in Mumbai, said that failures were bound to come in a cricketer's
career. "I have just failed in one Test match. When you are playing for
five or six years, some failures are bound to occur. It happened in Mumbai,
coincidentally we lost the match," the Indian captain said.
Ganguly, who will be leading the side for the first time in front of his
home crowd, said he did not apprehend any crowd trouble during the Test.
"Kolkata is the place where I have played most of my cricket. Tomorrow is
the first time I will be playing here as the national captain," the local
hero said. "Obviously, the crowds have not bothered me. Ups and downs will
be there, but I don't think that the crowd will be a problem. I think they
will back India. At the same time we have to play well," he said.
On Australian opener Michael Slater being banned from the Test, the Indian
skipper said "It's unfortunate. He is a good player. I have not been
informed officially, though I came to know about it through the media."
© PTI