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"They Forgot...": Gavaskar's Blunt Analysis Of Bangladesh's Kanpur Collapse

On the last day of the India vs Bangladesh 2nd Test in Kanpur on Tuesday, the visitors went from three down to seven down in the space of just three runs. Eight sessions were lost in the first three days due to persistent rain and it seemed that the game would just meander to a dull draw. However, after bowling out Bangladesh for 233, India destroyed the visitors' attack to take a 52-run lead, all in just 34.4 overs. The approach opened up the game. Then India kept Bangladesh under the pump, bowling them out for a mere 146 in the second essay and raced to the 95-run target in 17.2 overs.

Former Indian cricket team captain Sunil Gavaskar had an interesting take on Bangladesh's batting.

"I thought that maybe they forgot this is a Test match. There are plenty of days, and this is, of course, the last day. Some of the shots that we saw... from Shanto — you're right, when the shot comes off, it looks brilliant. When it doesn't come off, you have to think, what have you tried to do?" Gavaskar said on air.

"Then Shadman after reaching his half-century, playing a loose shot outside the off stump, these are things where he could have capitalised and gone on to get a hundred."

Bangladesh head coach Chandika Hathurusinghe on Tuesday admitted that his team was blown away by India's “not-seen-before” aggressive batting that eventually forced a result in the weather-hit second Test.

“This approach was not seen before and we did not react quickly. Credit to Rohit (Sharma) and his team for taking such an approach and making a game out of it,” Hathurusinghe said.

Understandably, Hathurusinghe said the defeat was painful, especially coming to these shores after a 2-0 series win over Pakistan.

“This defeat is really hurting us. Batting has been disappointing. We have not been performing to our potential in the last few series,” the coach added.

Asked if his bowlers did a better job than the batters, Hathurusinghe said he won't compare his players.

“Both are my players. Another factor is the quality of the opposition, and the skill level on display in this series was very high. We are learning a lot from here.” Hathurusinghe said the series taught his side about the areas they needed to improve.

“Going forward, we will know what the top standard is, since this is the best team. Playing India is the toughest assignment at this stage, so we know how much we need to improve,” he added.

With PTI inputs 



from NDTV News- Special https://ift.tt/mQUYqWM

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