The former Zimbabwe wicketkeeper-batsman said his side's poor batting display was the main reason for losing to the World Cup champions, who had finished second best to his team in the same format recently in England.
"We under-performed, there is no doubt about it. In the first two ODI matches, our highest individual score was about 61 (captain Alastair Cook in the first game at Hyderabad). I think our partnerships were limited. The highest was 70-odd.
"So, simply said, you cannot win games in most countries with this type of batting figures, and certainly not in the sub-continent," he said.
However, he held out some hope following the team's improved batting display in Thursday's third ODI."There are various areas which we can improve. They [players] are aware of it. Our batsmen showed some way in improving in number of areas yesterday (at Mohali), that includes the highest total (298) batting first in India," he said.
Though the series is out of his side's bag, Flower insisted the team would try and win the last two games to end the short visit on a better note.
"We had come here after a good summer and with high hopes. We have lost the series and the result is past. We look to the next two games. We will try to win the next two games and learn as a side and develop. The chance of winning the series is over," said Flower.
this
Users
Comment
article