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This article was first published 11 years ago

India to experiment with different field settings in World T20

Last updated on: September 18, 2012 20:21 IST

Image: Mahendra Singh Dhoni
Photographs: Stringer/Reuters

India will experiment with different field settings to compensate for their bowling deficiencies at the Twenty20 World Cup, captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni said on Tuesday a day ahead of his team's opening game against Afghanistan.

The 2007 champions failed to defend a formidable 185-run target against Pakistan in a warmup game on Monday with their key bowlers Irfan Pathan, Lakshmipathy Balaji, Zaheer Khan, and Harbhajan Singh going for more than 10 runs an over.

- India's bowling woes surface ahead of World T20

India lost the match by five wickets two days after they defeated Sri Lanka by 26 runs with the bowlers led by Pathan doing an excellent job to bowl out the hosts for 120 runs.

"Bowling has always been a bit of a concern. If you compare our batting to our bowling, we find the bowling slightly weaker than the batting," Dhoni told reporters.

"We will try different strategies and different field settings, so that you can complement our way of bowling."

'We are looking to play with seven batsmen to start up'


Photographs: Vivek Prakash/Reuters

India have always relied on part-time bowlers because they usually play with seven batsmen and four full-time bowlers. Dhoni said they could consider a change in the team composition to strengthen the bowling.

"We are looking to play with seven batsmen to start up the tournament and that means the part-timers will have to do a really good job," he said.

"Otherwise, as the tournament progresses and if we still find our bowling line is bit too week, we will have to go with six batters and five bowlers."

Tags: India

'Yuvraj is shaping well'

Image: Yuvraj Singh

Dhoni also said Yuvraj Singh, who has returned to the team after cancer treatment, looks fit for the shortest version of the game.

"He looks fit especially for this format. It's a short format and he is not 100 percent fit for something like Test cricket right now. But for this format, he is shaping well."

Source: REUTERS
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