The Phnom Penh Post

Smith blames poor decisions for India loss

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AUSTRALIA skipper per Steve Smith has blamed his team’s eam’s poor decision making underer pressure after their demoralisi­ngsing 4-1 loss to India in the one-day internatio­nals.

The visitors suffered fered a seven-wicket thrashinga­shing in the final ODIDI in Nagpur on Sunday ay to slip to third in the world rankings. They started the series s in second spot.

The latest defeat eat was Australia’s 12th th loss in their last 15 5 ODIs away from home – a worrying loss of form for the team just two monthsmont­h ahead of a home Ashes series against England. “We’re“We’r just not taking our words outo in the middle and doing iti with actions. We have glimpsesgl­imp of it and we play wellwe in periods and then wew just get ourselves in trouble,” Smith told reporters in Nagpur. “Probably from poor decision making under pressure, th that’s what I probably put it down to. That’s something that w we need to improve on b e c a u s e i t ’s n o t g o o d enough.”enou

Au Australia, who came to Indi India off the back of a disappoin pointing Test series in Bangl ladesh that ended 1-1, failed to capitalise on favourable positions throughout their four losses. The visitors allowed India to reach 281-7 after having them reeling at 87-5 in the first ODI.

The Australian batsmen also faltered against India’s wrist spinners.

“Probably lacking consistenc­y with the bat I’d say . . . I think we’re losing wickets in clumps very consistent­ly and that’s not good enough,” Smith said. “We probably didn’t adapt as well as we would have liked.”

Top Australian batsmen were guilty of not converting their starts into bigger scores, costing the visitors against a formidable Indian side.

Smith’s own form with the bat was not up to his usual high standards in the five matches, scoring 142 runs with two half-centuries. David Warner and Aaron Finch were the only Australian batsmen to make centuries.

“I wasn’t feeling great at the start of the series to be honest. I wasn’t holding the bat the way I would have liked to,” Smith said. “As the leader of the team it’s been disappoint­ing, but I guess sometimes that’s cricket. You have those periods where you’re not getting the scores you like.

“It’s something that hopefully I can turn around and hopefully contribute in the T20s.”

Smith played his 100th ODI in the series, having made his debut back in 2010.

Australia now head to Ranchi for the three-match Twenty20 series starting on Saturday. The second and third T20s will be played on October 10 and 13 in Guwahati and Hyderabad.

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