The Free Press Journal

Ponting shocked by the outcome

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shocked former captain Ricky Ponting finds it difficult to comprehend how an ‘A team’ from India beat Australia in the Test series in their own backyard but admitted that the visitors deserved the win.

An injury-ravaged India beat Australia by three wickets in the series-deciding fourth Test at the Gabba, a month after the Adelaide debacle where they scored their lowest Test score of 36.

"I'm quite shocked that Australia weren't quite good enough to win this series. The cold hard facts of it are pretty much that was the India A team that played this Test match and (India) still won," Ponting told cricket.com.au.

"Considerin­g everything the Indian team has been through in the last five or six weeks, with the captain leaving, all the injuries they've had – they've been through 20 players – (Australia) have been at full-strength, bar Davey (Warner) missing early on, so it's really hard to comprehend.

"It's probably not even (India's) second-picked team because you think of Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar and Ishant Sharma and those guys who didn't even make it out here.

Rohit Sharma turns up for the last two Test matches only."

Ponting said India won all the key moments throughout the series and that hes been the difference between the two sides.

"They've played really good, tough, hard Test match cricket day-in and day-out. India have won all the big moments in every Test match and Australia have fallen short. That's been the difference between the two teams."

"They (India) have done it really well and they thoroughly deserve to win the series ... because (of) how resilient they've been."

The legendary batsman, who coached Delhi Capitals in the last IPL in the UAE, said all the setbacks India had to deal with showed the depth and the talent the country has.

"Washington Sundar looked like he had played 50 Test matches through the course of this game and never looked out of place," Ponting said.

"Shardul Thakur was the same in his second Test match, picked up seven wickets and scored 60-odd handy runs in the first innings.

He said Australia should be concerned that a depleted Indian team was even good enough to beat them in their own backyard.

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