Khaleej Times

Kohli says team worked 12 months for series win

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We wanted to experiment with combinatio­ns and find out what suits the team best and take it forward from there

Ravi Shastri, Indian coach

2-1

Series triumph India achieved for the first time in 71 years

sydney — Superstar captain Virat Kohli on Monday called winning a series in Australia his proudest ever moment, capping a 12-month journey for his India team of hard graft, fixing mistakes and comradeshi­p.

Their 2-1 triumph achieved what no other Indian side has managed since they started touring to Australia in 1947-48, with the foundation­s for success laid not in the first Test at Adelaide, but on their tour of South Africa last year.

It was there, and the subsequent tour of England, that he and coach Ravi Shastri identified the attacking brand of cricket that they wanted to play, all in preparatio­n for Australia.

“We wanted to experiment with combinatio­ns and find out what suits the team best and take it forward from there,” said coach Ravi Shastri.

“So we learned a heck of a lot in South Africa, we learned a lot in England. We made mistakes, which we didn’t make in this series. We learned from those mistakes.

India lost 2-1 in Tests to South Africa in January last year, and were then outplayed in England 4-1.

“So the most satisfying part of it (winning in Australia) was it was a team working towards this goal over the last 12 months,” said Shastri.

That journey has led to India boasting one of the most fearsome bowling attacks in the world, with the breakthrou­ghs of speedster Jasprit Bumrah and spinner Kuldeep Yadav.

While India’s batting in Australia was a class above, anchored by Kohli and Cheteshwar Pujara, it was the consistenc­y of the bowling that made the difference, with no Australian batsmen scoring a century.

“The way the bowlers have dictated and dominated, not here but also in England and South Africa, it’s something I haven’t seen before,” said Kohli.

“Hats off to them, the way they’ve prepared, their fitness levels, and their mindset.”

So important was the win that Kohli, the best batsmen in the world in all three formats, placed it above being part of the Indian team that won the 2011 World Cup.

“It’s obviously a very proud moment. More so because for the last 12 months we understand what we have gone through as a team, we understand the kind of cricket we have been able to play,” he said.

“The fact that the reward has come in the most historic series for Indian cricket is the cherry on top of the cake.”

And while accolades will inevitably fall on Kohli, he has consistent­ly stressed through the series that it can never be about one person.

“It was a team effort through and through and that’s what we strive for. We strive to play well as a team,” he said.

“Single innings and single spells don’t win games of Test cricket. We play to make the team win.”

India was already the number one team in the world before the series began, with the win only shoring up their formidable reputation.

Kohli is passionate about Test cricket and said he wanted youngsters to look at what the team had achieved, and they way they have done it, for inspiratio­n to keep the red ball game in focus as limitedove­rs formats gain ever more traction. —

 ?? AFP ?? Skipper Virat Kohli kisses the Border-Gavaskar trophy after India won the Test series against home team Australia. —
AFP Skipper Virat Kohli kisses the Border-Gavaskar trophy after India won the Test series against home team Australia. —

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