New Straits Times

Kohli: Karthik pipped Pant because of experience

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MUMBAI: Dinesh Karthik’s experience and composure in pressure situations helped him pip young sensation Rishabh Pant to the second wicketkeep­er’s spot in India’s World Cup squad, captain Virat Kohli has said.

With Mahendra Singh Dhoni as the undisputed first-choice wicketkeep­er of the side, the selectors preferred Karthik, 33, in their 15-man squad over Pant, who is known for his swashbuckl­ing batting.

Teams can change players until May 23 and several former players believe India will miss the 21year-old in the showpiece which gets underway on May 30.

“In pressure situations, he’s shown composure,” Kohli told the Times of India newspaper about Karthik. “It was something that everybody on board was convinced about.

“He has the experience. If, god forbid, something happens to MS (Dhoni), Karthik can be immensely valuable behind the wickets. As a finisher, he’s done well.

“So, it was the overall exposure to a tournament of this magnitude that was taken into primary considerat­ion.”

Karthik made his one-day internatio­nal debut in 2004 and has played 91 matches for India in the format, compared with lefthanded batsman Pant who has played just five after making his 50-over debut last October.

Karthik, who has also played 26 Test matches for India, has the ability to bat anywhere in the batting order which makes him a limited-overs asset.

“We can very well imagine there’s more than an opinion in place that some capable guys have missed out,” India coach Ravi Shastri added. “Heart goes out to them.

“Picking 15 from an immensely talented pool is never easy. I’d say to these guys: Keep going the way you have. Be prepared, in case there’s an unforeseen requiremen­t that pops up.”

Unlike the India of the past, the 1983 and 2011 winners also boast a very potent pace attack, led by top-ranked ODI bowler Jasprit Bumrah.

The death-overs specialist will be aided by Mohammed Shami and Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar, with both known for their ability to swing the ball both ways — something which should be handy in conditions in England.

India begin their bid for a third World Cup title against South Africa in Southampto­n on June 5.

BRISTOL: Jonny Bairstow said playing alongside the likes of Australia’s David Warner in the Indian Premier League had helped take his game to new heights after his match-winning hundred against Pakistan in Bristol.

Opening batsman Bairstow’s blistering 128 off 93 balls helped World Cup hosts England to a sixwicket win in the third one-day internatio­nal on Tuesday as they went 2-0 up in a five-match series with two to play.

The 29-year-old Yorkshirem­an carried on his recent form from the lucrative Twenty20 IPL where he scored 445 runs in 10 games at an average of 55.62 for the Sunrisers Hyderabad.

“You’re able to learn different things from different coaches and different players,” said Bairstow, who opened the batting for the Sunrisers with Warner — set to be an opponent during the World Cup and subsequent Ashes series in England.

“It’s just little things like game plans,” Bairstow added.

“He (Warner) hits in completely different areas to potentiall­y myself. I guess it’s method more than anything else. But learning from them, as well as the guys here, that can only be a good thing playing under pressure with expectatio­n.”

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