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Yadav on his metamorphosis into an asset bowler

March 17, 2017 19:47 IST

'With more matches, I began realising what to do and what not. I slowly realised my strength and weaknesses. Now I have a better idea'

'At times it's very difficult to bowl against him (Steve Smith). You bowl with a particular plan but sometimes he changes his stance, shuffles from leg-stump to off, opening up, sort of affects your plan'

India's Umesh Yadav (centre) celebrates the dismissal of Australia's Matt Renshaw on Thursday

IMAGE: India's Umesh Yadav (centre) celebrates the dismissal of Australia's Matt Renshaw on Thursday. Photograph: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

India paceman Umesh Yadav says an assured place in the Indian Test team has helped him explore his weaknesses and strengths as a bowler, which has boosted his confidence.

Yadav, who has been consistently hitting the right line and length, said he has worked hard to cut down his errors after criticism from the media.

"I'm doing the same thing but the confidence level is high, having played more matches. And the hard work is paying off. When I was in and out of the team, I was not sure what to do. With more matches, I began realising what to do and what not. I slowly realised my strength and weaknesses. Now I have a better idea," Yadav said on Friday.

"A lot was written in the media earlier that I bowl a leg-stump line and concede boundaries on the leg side. I have cut that off in a big way and slowly I got back to my rhythm. Trying to bowl in the best way."

Yadav said the pitch dictates the manner in which a bowler bowls.

"Once I understand the wicket, then I figure out if a cross seam ball will be effective or when it can be used effectively. It is about understanding the wicket and decide on a cross or upright seam. When I feel the ball can jump up off a length or variable bounce then I bring that into my game."

Australia's Steven Smith plays a shot during his innings of 181 on Friday

IMAGE: Australia's Steven Smith plays a shot during his innings of 178 (not out) on Friday. Photograph: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

Steve Smith scored the only second century of the series, both by him, as he remained unbeaten on a stellar 178 and Yadav said the Aussie captain's open-up stance derails their bowling plan.

"At times it's very difficult to bowl against him. You bowl with a particular plan but sometimes he changes his stance, shuffles from leg-stump to off, opening up, sort of affects your plan. You have to keep an eye on him till the last moment and bowl accordingly.

India replied strongly with 120/1 in 40 overs with a deficit of 331 runs and Yadav said they were in course to get past the Aussie lead.

"It's difficult to stop singles on this wicket. They took-four-and-a-half sessions to score 451-- on an average 100 per session -- like we saw today in our batting, we scored 120.

"It's not easy to bowl on this wicket. Once the ball goes in the gap it goes for a boundary. We will try to achieve the target, though it maybe 20-30 runs less or more," Yadav said.

On the pitch he said: "I don't think pitch has changed. Still hope for the best. The pitch is easy to bat on. Can't predict how much the wicket will change, whether it would turn and assist the bowlers more."

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