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Have to be More Aggressive Against Indian Batting, Says Ish Sodhi
By Shruti - Jan 26, 2020 11:00 am
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Leg-spinner Ish Sodhi said they need to be more aggressive with the ball against mighty India and his superb batting unit during the second T20I to return in the five-match series. India registered a six-wicket win in the first T20I after chasing down 204. On the other hand, Sodhi felt India bowlers didn’t do well.

Ish Sodhi
Ish Sodhi

“We put 200 on the board again. If we can look to be more aggressive with the ball that attitude will be a great learning from the first game. If we are going to go for runs or miss out on a couple opportunities for wickets, you only learn after you try it out,” said Sodhi on Saturday.

“You have to see how the game is going on. But it differs from batsman to batsman and bowler to bowler. You have to discuss with the captain and the bowling group as well. Mitchell Santner and myself do that a lot. Last night he was in the outfield so I spoke a lot with Kane (Williamson). I bowled 2-3 overs’ spell, and one of them was a defensive spell; the other was an attacking spell. So we have to bowl with the same attacking attitude throughout,” he added.

The spinner also said it is tough to create pressure on India as they have some world-class batsmen but they need to find a way to do well and also return in the second T20I.

“They have five or six world class batsmen in their side and it will always be difficult to contain them at the best of times. Eden Park with its boundary size is a challenge as well,” said Sodhi, who was the pick of the bowlers, taking 2 for 36 on Friday.

“Kane was good with the bowlers at end of the game and the thinking as a bowling group was that we have to take wickets. 45 from 4 overs would be decent here but it won’t be on many other grounds. So we have to make the aggressive shift for the next game but we did really good with 200 runs on the board. We just need to defend it better,” he added.

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Eden Park is a small ground and helps the batsmen. We have already seen a run-fest in the first game. The second game will be played on the same venue but Ish Sodhi said the pitch might get slow down for the game on Sunday.

Ish Sodhi
Ish Sodhi

“You have to look at whether wicket gets better. We found it was holding on Friday night, cross-seamers were holding a bit and the ball was spinning a bit too,” he said. “We will have to see if it gets slower and if there is dew factor like there was under the lights (on Friday). It’s just one of those grounds where good and bad balls go for sixes, and it can be quite hard to contain at times.”

“We don’t play a lot of cricket there but it’s unique. Boundaries are not favouring any one side, same for both sides, and we have been successful in the past there. We just have to figure out how to defend there or if we need to change tactics and bowl first. The team management will have that conversation,” he shared.

Dew was another factor at Eden Park on Friday and Ish Sodhi said the same conditions could be seen in the second match. He also felt late starts could pose trouble throughout this five-match series. He also said floodlights sometimes make it difficult while fielding. He dropped an easy catch off Virat Kohli,

“I haven’t had much time to process it but last night we thought we played a decent game. The first half was nicely set up, a huge positive with the bat. The Indians came out pretty hard in the first six overs. They had momentum from end of our innings and we couldn’t really go hard at them,” he expressed.

“Maybe we need to train a bit more under lights otherwise we are all used to playing at 8pm starting time. It is not too bad and we have played in the IPL at night time. The lights here are a bit different as most stadiums have five-six towers. Here they are low and in a line, so it can be tough catching. It hits you harder when the ball comes down, but no excuses. When that catch went down (off Virat Kohli), I was thinking what if he scores big now. But that is the nature of professional cricket and you have to take your chances,” Ish Sodhi concluded.