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Fletcher aiming for moral victory
Wisden CricInfo staff - February 2, 2002

BOMBAY (Reuters)
England are bidding for a "moral victory" in Sunday's sixth and final game in their one-day series against India, the visiting team's coach Duncan Fletcher has said.

The two teams go into the match with India leading the rubber 3-2 but Fletcher said a series-levelling win for England would underline the strength of character in his young team.

"To get back to three-all would be quite an achievement. I don't think many sides have done that in India in one-day cricket. Just Australia the last time they were here," Fletcher said.

"It will be a moral victory from the amount of criticism we've taken. When we came out here, we were heavily criticised that we were inexperienced and that it would be a walkover in the Test series. We came back very well there.

"In the one-day series, we took an even bigger mauling before we arrived. How pathetic we were. How we were inexperienced and we were going to get knocked over six-nil. This just shows the character of the side."

At the end of last year, England lost a three-Test series against India 1-0 but had held the upper hand for most of the drawn second and third matches. Before that, Australia were beaten 2-1 by India in a gripping Test rubber but bounced back to clinch the one-day series 3-2.

Fletcher said England had been forced to depend heavily on their younger players throughout the one-day series against India.

"We have a very young team here. We're trying to give them experience but sometimes we have got to sit down and look at what the match and the situation needs," he said. "It's a very difficult jigsaw puzzle. We're trying to put it together."

The England coach said that levelling the one-day matches against India would provide a major confidence boost for the team ahead of their upcoming tour to New Zealand.

Fletcher said England's main weapon in India had been their team spirit. "You win more games in the changing room than you do out in the middle," he said.

"If you get the attitude right, pulling for each other, you have got a huge advantage. The team feels they want to be in the bubble. If you can create that bubble, you can have a huge effect on the performance of the side."

England narrowly lost the opening one-dayer in Calcutta by 22 runs but fought back with a thrilling 16-run victory in Cuttack three days later. India pulled ahead 3-1 after a four-wicket triumph in Madras and an eight-wicket mauling in Kanpur but England managed to stay in the series after their nail-biting victory by two runs in New Delhi on Thursday.

"I think six matches was too much. We came out here to work on the side and have a few days to practise," Fletcher said.

Squads
India Sourav Ganguly (capt), Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag, Dinesh Mongia, Hemang Badani, Mohammad Kaif, Ajay Ratra (wk), Ajit Agarkar, Anil Kumble, Harbhajan Singh, Javagal Srinath, Sanjay Bangar, Sarandeep Singh, Zaheer Khan.

England Nasser Hussain (capt), Marcus Trescothick, Nick Knight, Michael Vaughan, Graham Thorpe, James Foster (wk), Andrew Flintoff, Jeremy Snape, Ashley Giles, Matthew Hoggard, Craig White, Paul Collingwood, Andy Caddick, Owais Shah, Ben Hollioake, Darren Gough.

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