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Rediff.com  » Cricket » 'Leaving aside Bhuvneshwar, most of our bowlers gave away runs'

'Leaving aside Bhuvneshwar, most of our bowlers gave away runs'

October 09, 2014 11:17 IST
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India's Mohit Sharma celebrates with teammates the fall of a West Indies wicket. Photograph: BCCI

Barring Bhuvneshwar Kumar all the Indian bowlers leaked runs in the first ODI against West Indies, but home team skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni has backed his underfire bowling attack despite crashing to an embarrassing 124-run loss in the series opener in Kochi. 

India paid the price for some mediocre bowling as the Caribbeans, who were on the verge of boycotting the ODI, rode on Marlon Samuels' career-best equalling 126 not out to post a mammoth 321 for six at the Nehru Stadium. But Dhoni refused to put the blame on his bowlers, saying they did a "decent job". 

"What we have to evaluate is how the wicket was? I felt that it was a very good wicket to bat on. There was not much turn. Leaving aside Bhuvneshwar, most of our bowlers gave away runs. Considering this a total of 320 on this wicket, I feel our bowlers did a decent job," the skipper said.

Indian team captain MS Dhoni with his deputy Virat Kohli. Photograph: BCCI

I was quite happy with the death bowling. Our bowlers bowled quite consistently at the death. They maintained their lengths and we were able to put fielders in right areas. Overall, I am quite happy with the bowling," Dhoni said.

"We bowled really well in the death overs. The ground is not very big, so 320-325 is a par score on wicket like this." Medium pacer Bhuvneshwar was the most economical bowler for India, conceding just 38 runs off his 10 overs but failed to pick up any wicket.

If India's bowling was mediocre, their batting display can be turned as shoddy as the West Indies bundled out the hosts for just 197 runs in 41 overs to take a 1-0 lead in the five-match series.

India's Suresh Raina looks back after getting bowled by West Indies captain Dwayne Bravo. Photograph: BCCI

Asked Dhoni about India's batting performance, he said lack of partnerships and losing quick wickets rattled their chase. 

"We needed a good start to chase that score. We started off really well but after the run out of Ajinkya (Rahane) we could not stop losing wickets," he said. 

"While chasing 320 if you keep losing wickets in quick succession, it becomes difficult for the batsmen. We lost too many wickets in close succession. It was important to get partnerships going." West Indies started the series as underdogs but the Indian skipper said he was not at all surprised by the
performance of the Caribbeans in the first ODI. 

"I think they batted really well. They have a fantastic ODI squad. They can bat till nine and they have got proper five bowlers besides a strong bench strength. All of them were quite experienced in bowling in death overs. They bowled consistently in the same areas. They have got the right kind of players," Dhoni said. 

Marlon Samuels of the West Indies plays a shot as India's captain MS Dhoni looks on. Photograph: BCCI

Asked to analyse the reason behind India's embarrassing defeat, Dhoni said: "They batted really well. We could not get too many wickets with the new ball. 

"They were hitting the big shots. We couldn't put pressure on them and gave them easy singles." Vice-captain Virat Kohli's scored just two runs in Kochi, but Dhoni backed his deputy to return to form soon.

"At the end of the day if you are looking to chase 300 plus runs, one or two players can't achieve it. He (Kohli) is having a lean period and I sure he will come back to form soon.

"We have to give him time. This is something new for him. Hopefully he will get back to his usual form and score big runs," Dhoni said. 

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