The Sunday Guardian

India look for a clean sweep

Having already won the ODI series, Virat’s men will be eager to make it 3-0 in the final match in Kolkata.

- Yuvraj Singh scored a brilliant century in the second ODI on Thursday.

Ironing out deficienci­es and building on a formidable squad will be top of the agenda when India take on England in their last One Day Internatio­nal (ODI) ahead of the ICC Champions Trophy at the Eden Gardens here on Sunday.

The three-match rubber has already been pocketed by Virat Kohli’s men in blue who have won the first two matches at Pune and Cuttack.

But with there being no 50-over engagement before June when the Champions Trophy gets underway in England, coach Anil Kumble and captain Kohli will have a final chance to assess the squad before they get into whites again for the one-off Test against Bangladesh and then the fourmatch series against Australia.

The hosts have played like a well-oiled machine so far in the series whether chasing or batting first.

If in the first tie, it was Kohli’s turn to lead from the front in a 351-run chase along with Kedar Jadhav stepping up; the second offing was all about deja vu as seasoned campaigner­s Yuvraj Singh (150) and Mahendra Singh Dhoni (134) jogged back time with a sublime 256-run stand for the fourth wicket.

The duo, important cogs in India’s 2011 World Cup winning wheel, dragged India out of a hole with vintage batting displays after joining hands with the team tottering at 25/3 batting first.

In England, where pitches would not be conducive to batting as it was in these two games, the experience of Dhoni and Yuvraj could come in handy.

In the first ODI in Pune, Jadhav came of age batting at No 6 when the team was reeling at 63/4 to score a brilliant hundred with some shots, as Kohli would later put it, being out of the ordinary.

Kohli, too played a masterly innings, one which is so typical of India’s finest batsman in current times, to notch up his 27th ODI ton and 17th in a run chase.

The bone of contention is the opening slot where both Shikhar Dhawan and K.L. Rahul have failed to get runs.

While Dhawan has a nagging finger injury that might keep him out of the third ODI, Rahul will have to better his showing if he wants to keep his place for the Champions Trophy.

Rohit Sharma, who is usually preferred to open the batting in the shorter format, is out injured. Ajinkya Rahane is India›s another option but poor form in the last series against New Zealand at home is the reason the elegant right-hander is yet to be drafted in the first XI. On Sunday, Rahane could get a chance to stake a claim in the side. Besides Dhawan›s injury issue, the southpaw, in all fairness, has been enduring a lean patch with scores of 1 and 11 in the last two ODIs. IANS

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