Sports

Dhoni does not have magic wand: Fleming

CSK coach Stephen Fleming says MS Dhoni can’t work miracles as the team looks to bounce back after five consecutive losses.

Sentinel Digital Desk

Lucknow: Ahead of his side’s away game against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG), Chennai Super Kings (CSK) head coach Stephen Fleming said that after five successive losses, the five-time champions will be working with stand-in skipper MS Dhoni to turn things around, but the legend is not a “soothsayer” and does not have a “magic wand”.

Speaking ahead of the match in the pre-match presser, Fleming said as quoted by ESPNCricinfo that Dhoni’s influence will always be prominent, but, “He is not a soothsayer, he has not got a magic wand. He cannot just rub it over the side; otherwise, he would have brought it out earlier.”

“It is a case of us working very hard along with MS to turn it around and certainly in both of our cricketing careers, we have been in situations that require a lot of energy and we have got to make sure that the energy is put in the right place,” he added.

Fleming also said that the team is aiming to get better in all three facets of the game and take small steps to do so and added that the “lack of competition” in the last match would hurt the team a lot.

“So there is certainly been a lot of internal soul searching but also a lot of work around what we need to do, and it is important that we put a performance out that is representative of the proud franchise that we are.” “There’s a lot of hurt that we can turn to motivation but it is not about words, it is about players grabbing the moment, finding form, finding their groove and almost shaking off any apprehension which can creep in,” he added.

Having hit just 32 sixes this season, CSK has averaged around just five sixes per game and none of their batters have scored above 150 runs so far. None of them have a strike rate of above 150 either. Fleming feels that the strike rate and lack of sixes are not as big an issue, and the batting would be just fine using other methods.

“We do [talk about the sixes], but it is not everything,” he said.

“I know there is a fascination with power and six hitting, but there is also a couple of teams doing well with good craft, and It would very sad if the day came to us just being in a baseball competition and talking about sixes and fours,” he said.

“The beauty of the game is that there is still balance between bat and ball. Conditions play a big part, but there is still room for craft, and you are still seeing top-class players playing pivotal innings when it is not flat like a road, and I just hope the balance can remain,” he added. (ANI)

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