India’s Dhoni blames batting woes

CENTURION, South Africa, (Reuters) – India captain  Mahendra Singh Dhoni has blamed his team’s fragile batting for  the one-day series defeat in South Africa.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni

India, set 268 to win in 46 overs, lost the final one-day  match by 33 runs after crashing to 119 for eight at Centurion yesterday, losing the series 3-2 after being 2-1 ahead.

“The batting department has not been good in these one-day  internationals and that was the main reason we lost the series,”  Dhoni told reporters. “We should have got 268 today.

“Batting has been a difficult task in this series, you want  to take the opposition on, but then you can lose wickets. We  weren’t really able to see a prolonged slog because of the  wickets that had been lost.

Dhoni said some of his batsmen had not had enough quality  practice sessions.

“But they are experienced players and, playing 30-35 ODIs a  year, they are used to handling up-and-down form. So I’m hopeful  it won’t be the same at the World Cup.”

Yusuf Pathan blazed 105 off 70 balls for India and Dhoni  said he was confident India would be able to chase down any  total at the World Cup.

“One of the biggest positives is that we showed that we can  chase anything in the last 10 overs if we have wickets in hand  and guys like Yusuf down the order,” he said.

Take confidence

South Africa captain Graeme Smith said they would take  confidence into the tournament.

“The World Cup will be very different. Jacques Kallis will  be back and it will be batting-friendly conditions, so it  follows that we’ll be looking at different combinations. But  it’s nice to have confidence and some momentum when we step on  to the plane,” Smith said.

Smith, who will lead South Africa for the second time at a  World Cup, said his side had been battle-hardened by their  thrilling series against India.

“When we were 2-1 down, we were under pressure and needed to  play well. It was hard cricket, we needed to be at our best to  win and that’s what you want ahead of the World Cup,” he said.

The World Cup starts on Feb. 19 with India playing  Bangladesh at Mirpur, Dhaka. The 1983 champions are in the same  pool as three-times semi-finalists South Africa, along with  England, West Indies, Bangladesh, Ireland and the Netherlands.