We Are 90 Per Cent Settled; Only A Few Changes Will Happen For T20 WC, Asserts Sharma

India lost another thrilling match to Sri Lanka at the Dubai International Stadium on Tuesday evening with Dasun Shanaka’s side defeating them by six wickets
We Are 90 Per Cent Settled; Only A Few Changes Will Happen For T20 WC, Asserts Sharma

DUBAI: India captain Rohit Sharma is confident his side is 90 per cent settled as it prepares for the ICC T20 World Cup in Australia later this year, despite the team having lost both its Asia Cup Super Four games — to Pakistan and Sri Lanka — so far, and are virtually out of the competition barring a miracle.

India lost another thrilling match to Sri Lanka at the Dubai International Stadium on Tuesday evening with Dasun Shanaka's side defeating them by six wickets with just one ball remaining, thus making Sharma's side's qualification for the Asia Cup final, and possibly a dream title clash against Pakistan, next to impossible.

"We are 90 per cent settled; only a few changes will happen," said Sharma in the post-match press conference.

"We don't have any shortcomings. There is quality in the team. There is more pressure in multi-nation series as compared to bilateral series. We have discussed this. it's unfortunate that we couldn't get past the group stages of the T20 World Cup (in the UAE 2021) and now we lost two matches in the Asia Cup Super Four," Sharma stated about the setup of his side heading into the showpiece event in Australia.

"We are not worried after losing two matches back to back. We have won so many matches after the 2021 T20 World Cup," he added.

India failed to get off to a good start in the powerplay with the bat, losing both KL Rahul and Virat Kohli early. Batting during the tournament has been an area of concern, with the team failing to get off to good starts, while also being unable to close out the end of the innings.

On India's batting, Sharma was quoted as saying by ICC, "We didn't score as many runs as we wanted to in the first six overs because we lost wickets. We should have capitalised better from the momentum we got after that.

"We couldn't close the game properly with the bat. We had spoken about this in the team meeting... about how nicely we have dealt with in close matches. These things happen. We were 10 or 12 runs short but we still had a good score." IANS

Also Watch: 

Top Headlines

No stories found.
Sentinel Assam
www.sentinelassam.com