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Ravi Shastri defends Virat Kohli’s work ethic

Shastri, a former India captain, said losing the toss in the semi-final against Australia hurt the Indian team.

Ravi Shahtrai is India'n team director © IANS
Ravi Shahtrai is India’n team director © IANS

New Delhi: Defending an under-fire Virat Kohli, Indian cricket Team Director Ravi Shastri on Tuesday said the swashbuckling batsman’s ordinary run in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015 had nothing to do with his actress-girlfriend Anushka Sharma’s presence and to call it that is “utter nonsense”. READ: Rahul Dravid defends Virat Kohli

“If it was so, Virat wouldn’t have got 700 runs and smashed four centuries in Tests in Australia. His work ethics is as good as any I have seen. His heart beats for India. It’s a pedigree you don’t see often. And to tell you the truth, he isn’t a finished article yet,” Shastri told. Shastri found much to praise in Kohli’s revival after a disastrous England tour last year when he constantly fell to Jimmy Anderson and company. Top 10 bowlers in ICC Cricket World Cup 2015

Kohli showed that, “it’s not the size of the dog in fight that matters. It’s the fight in dog that counts,” Shastri said. Shastri also lavished praise on skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni saying that the wicket-keeper batsman will only get better from here on. Top 10 batsmen in ICC Cricket World Cup 2015

“He would only get better now that he has retired from Test cricket. He would be fitter and would have time to work on his batting. He would still have a lot of time to torture bowlers around the world,” he said. Top 10 fielders in ICC Cricket World Cup 2015

Shastri, a former India captain, said losing the toss in the semi-final against Australia hurt the Indian team. While praising the eventual champions and terming them as “the best side in the tournament”, Shastri still believed that the only team which Australia feared could beat them was India. Top 10 wicketkeepers in ICC Cricket World Cup 2015

Steve Smith was a constant thorn in India’s flesh and Shastri had high words of praise for the young Australian batsman. “A lot of teams asked me for weakness in his game. They asked we [Indians] ought to know since we have been here for four months. My answer always was, ‘let me know his weakness in case you find it’.

He has tremendous hand-eye co-ordination, a very sharp cricketing brain and he invariably finds gaps in the field,” Shastri explained. One highlight of India’s performance was the performance of its medium-pace trio of Umesh Yadav, Mohammad Shami and Mohit Sharma.

“I call Shami nawab of Kolkata; Umesh the one of Vidarbha and Mohit Sharma was Haryana Express faster than Rajdhani. They bowled like fast bowlers,” he said.

“The Indian medium-pace trio was as good as any in this competition. How many times you see a Hashim Amla and a Younis Khan ducking into a short ball and fending a catch to fielders inside a circle? They bowled with the mindset of a fast bowler,” he added. Shastri was also all praise for Ravichandran Ashwin who was prepared to give air to the ball even when the rules restricted the protection for him in the deep fields.

“His variation of pace was the key to his show,” Shastri said. Shastri said there is immense potential in this young Indian team and predicted that 80 per cent of this nucleus would still be around in four years’ time, in 2019 World Cup.

“They are young, fit and hungry. They are ambitious. People don’t realise this tour of Australia has done their confidence a world of good. It would keep them, and India, in good stead.”

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