World Cup: Number 4 the focus as India faces New Zealand in warm-up

Armed with pedigree, personnel and form, favourite India will look to hit the ground running when it faces New Zealand in its opening warm-up game of the World Cup on Saturday.

Published : May 24, 2019 17:15 IST , London

Jasprit Bumrah and Bhuvneshwar Kumar during a practice session in London on Thursday.
Jasprit Bumrah and Bhuvneshwar Kumar during a practice session in London on Thursday.
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Jasprit Bumrah and Bhuvneshwar Kumar during a practice session in London on Thursday.

Armed with pedigree, personnel and form, favourite India will look to hit the ground running when it faces New Zealand in its opening warm-up game of the World Cup here Saturday.

However, with India yet to clear the haze of confusion over the No.4 position, it will be much more than a ritual of allowing one top-order batsman after another -- behemoths in their own right -- a hit in the middle.

The outing at the Kennigton Oval will go beyond experimenting with its highly skilled bowling attack, and quite a bit of focus will be on K L Rahul and Vijay Shankar, contenders for the No.4 slot.

Dubbed the most challenging World Cup ever owing to a format that is a throwback to the 1992 edition, Virat Kohli’s team still arrived at the United Kingdom confident of adding to its two titles in the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) showpiece event.

India won the tournament in 1983 and 2011.

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Kohli’s men, second behind England in the one-day international rankings, will start the tournament among the favourite alongside the host nation and defending champion Australia.

It begins its campaign in tournament proper against South Africa in Southampton on June 5, but India will get its first feel of the mega event in the iconic British capital.

While the arch lights will be firmly trained on its talismanic skipper, the number one batsman in 50-over as well as Test cricket, India, and its opponent, would also keenly watch its fancied pace attack that is a mix of speed and guile.

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Vijay Shankar has been chosen as the No.4 for India.
 

In Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan as openers followed by Virat Kohli, India has one of the finest and potent top three in the world. Veteran Mahendra Singh Dhoni, all-rounder Kedar Jadhav and the big-hitting Hardik Pandya provide depth to the line-up.

Opponents will observe the ability of India’s seamers to exploit the conditions, which could be the most important factor going ahead.

Jasprit Bumrah, the top-ranked ODI bowler in the world, leads the pace battery alongside Mohammed Shami, Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Hardik.

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Wrist spinners Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal add variety to India’s attack, and Kohli sees them playing an influential role in the coming weeks.

The seasoned Ross Taylor, one of the finest limited overs batsmen in recent years, had said it was good that New Zealand were playing India in the practice game. The reverse also holds true for India, as New Zealand offers them the kind of challenge that could make Kohli’s team battle-hardened.

Kohli has expressed confidence in his side’s ability to live up to the billing, while his counterpart Kane Williamson also expressed how pleased he was to have the squad back together, with New Zealand having last played an ODI on February 19 against Bangladesh.

“It’s been great get together for the last few days. We’ve not played together for a couple of months but we’re not the only ones in that boat. The guys are excited to be back in camp which is really refreshing, and we’re looking forward to the challenges that we have got coming up,” Williamson had said at the Captain’s meet.

 

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