The Citizen (KZN)

India to tweak batting order

DISASTROUS: CAPTAIN AT NO 4 HAS ‘NOT GONE OUR WAY’

- New Delhi

Indian captain Virat Kohli acknowledg­ed the need to rethink the team’s batting order after being steamrolle­d by the Australian­s in Mumbai on Tuesday, but said there was no cause to panic.

India were subjected to a 10-wicket thrashing in the first one-day internatio­nal of a threematch series.

That happened for only the fifth time in their history after they scored a modest 255, a total overhauled by Australia in the 38th over.

India packed three openers in their playing XI in a bid to give more game time to in-form players, rejigging the top order with

Kohli dropping down to No 4 to accommodat­e KL Rahul at No 3, but the plan came unstuck against a fired-up Australian attack.

“Because of the way KL has been batting, we have tried to fit him in the batting line-up,” Kohli told Star Sports about his batting position at the Wankhede Stadium. “Having said that, I don’t think it’s quite gone our way whenever I’ve batted No 4, so we’ll probably have to rethink that one.”

Rohit Sharma made 10, while fellow opener Shikhar Dhawan forged a century partnershi­p with Rahul. India then lost four wickets, including Kohli, for 30 runs before being bowled out in the final over.

“All in all it’s about giving some guys opportunit­ies and you’ll never know if this works or not if you don’t try,” Kohli said.

“It’s easy to just go with one template and follow it non-stop.

“I think people need to relax and not panic with one game.

“I’m allowed to experiment a little bit, and fail as well at times.

“You lose games here and there, but today was one of the days where it didn’t come off.”

Australian openers David Warner and Aaron Finch smashed unbeaten hundreds and stitched together the largest partnershi­p against India in a one-day match to help the tourists romp home with 12.2 overs to spare.

The two sides will meet in Rajkot for the second ODI tomorrow. –

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