close
Tuesday April 16, 2024

Kohli takes lightly India’s losing Test cricket´s top ranking

By AFP
August 22, 2016

Port of Spain: India captain Virat Kohli made light of losing Test cricket´s top ranking to arch-rivals Pakistan in the aftermath of the abandoned fourth and final match of the series against the West Indies in Trinidad on Monday.

With a waterlogged outfield limiting play to just 22 overs before lunch on the first day, when the West Indies reached 62 for two, the tourists missed out on the opportunity to complete a 3-0 series triumph and solidify their position as the number-one team in the traditional format of the game.

"I said at the time that getting to number one was always a short-term incentive," said Kohli at the post-match ceremony in bright sunshine.

"Other teams have played 10-15 more Tests than us so it will keep switching. We can judge ourselves better at the end of our home season."

India are scheduled to play 13 Tests at home over the next six months.

West Indies captain Jason Holder acknowledged that his team was outplayed throughout much of the series but insisted there were gradual improvements in the team´s overall performance.

"We looked set to compete at certain stages of the series but just couldn´t close out at crucial stages," he explained. "We faltered a bit in this series. Going forward we need to seize those moments."

The West Indies´ next Test assignment is against top-ranked Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates, beginning in September, on a tour that also involves three one-day internationals and three Twenty20 internationals.

Ravichandran Ashwin´s status as a top-class all-rounder was enhanced by his performances in the series, as his two centuries with the bat and two five-wicket hauls with the ball saw him named ´Man of the Series´.

"When we started this series we wanted to come here and play aggressive cricket," said Ashwin. "We wanted to play five bowlers in all the games. That´s something we wanted to try out."

India maintained that tactic until the final match at the Queen´s Park Oval, opting to omit left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja in preference for batsman Chesteshwar Pujara.

In the end though, the deplorable playing conditions and the local authorities´ unpreparedness in coping with the challenges caused by the rains of the first afternoon rendered the tactical alterations meaningless.

West Indies Cricket Board chief executive Michael Muirhead expressed his organisation´s surprise with the state of the outfield and is awaiting an explanation from the officials of the Queen´s Park Cricket Club over the circumstances that meant there was no play over the last four days of the match despite almost continuous sunshine.

"We have been to this ground so many times and for every ground we ensure that they are prepared," he insisted to local media on Monday. "We certainly ensure they are equipped with the necessary tools."