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India vs New Zealand, 2nd Test: Virat Kohli says No.1 Test side will not take foot off the pedal


Reclaiming the No. 1 spot has not satiated Virat Kohli’s hunger for success and the Indian captain today said the team will at no point “take the foot off the pedal” as he set his sights on holding onto the numero uno status for a prolonged period.

India dethroned arch-rivals Pakistan from the top of the ICC Test rankings with a 178-run win over New Zealand for an unassailable 2-0 lead, the victory coming on the back of a brilliant all-round performance.

“I mentioned this before also, rankings are something that are just an incentive for what you do on the field. I didn’t even know how many points difference we had to get to No 1. We just want to win every game we play, it’s as simple as that,” Kohli said in the post match news conference.

He added, “It doesn’t mean that we take the foot off the pedal in Indore. We don’t drop intensity there, we don’t drop our character, our vision to win a Test match for the country.”

This was India’s fourth successive Test series victory under Kohli, beginning with the success story in Sri Lanka. India are now unbeaten in 13 Tests, including 11 wins and two draws.

Taking a dig at critics, the combative skipper said, “I feel all those questions are to take the focus away from the team. We don’t believe in that. Because we have to go and play cricket ourselves. We can’t think of external factors. We never do.

Kohli said the team’s only aim is to win matches, irrespective of where they are playing.
“We have shown that over the past one-and-a-half years. So we don’t go out there to prove anything to anyone. That we have a challenging win and we have to win because people are asking questions. We are doing our job, people are doing theirs. That’s how the balance goes.

“It’s basically what you want to entertain and what you don’t want to entertain. As simple as that. But when we go on to the pitch we have control of what we can achieve. We understand our abilities.

“We have enough belief in our abilities to play good cricket anywhere. Not putting pressure of winning on challenging wickets, but believing in ourselves to execute our plans to the best of our abilities to execute.”

Having completed a comprehensive 197-run victory on a turning Kanpur wicket, the conditions at the Eden were different. The relaid surface offered variable bounce as the Indian seamers took 12 wickets, including a fine five-wicket haul for Bhuvneshwar Kumar.

“Obviously individual brilliance, one-odd game, someone will get a magnificent hundred in the fourth innings and win you the game. You’ll feel very happy but as a captain I think this win is far more satisfying than individual brilliance winning you a game.

“You don’t want to sit in the dressing room and see a couple of sad faces. If all of your players perform, there is nothing like it. When everyone contributes, it is a happy environment.”

Kohli said India showed a lot of character to play well in tough conditions.

“This is a Test that players took as an opportunity to build character rather than pressure. The more we win Test matches like this the more we understand how Test cricket is played, how Test matches can be won. So we can keep repeating those things. It’s all about feeding those things into your head and keep repeating it. That’s what consistency is.”

Kohli was seen egging on the sparse Eden turnout and he said it makes a massive difference.

“You have to interact with them, you have to make sure they are a part of the whole thing. It just creates an energy and you feed off on that.

“It happens so much in limited overs, so why not in Test cricket? A challenging situation in Test cricket is the most exciting thing a viewer can see, and for a player playing as well, to feel.

“It’s our responsibility to keep Test cricket where it belongs, and if we play cricket like this – you saw how engaged the crowd was, they like to see exciting cricket, and we have to provide it.

“You can sense that energy which no other format can provide for you. We are just taking this as a privilege and a responsibility to keep doing what we can do, to the best of our abilities and hopefully get the right results every time – it won’t happen every time we know. But at least we can try to win a game of cricket every time we step onto the field, that’s all we think about.”

Citing the example of crowd atmosphere in Australia and England, he said: “There if they get a couple of wickets, the crowd gets behind really loud and as a batsman you understand that it creates a lot of pressure, you feel nervous.”

“So I just try to think as a batsman, how I would feel walking in, the ball is reverse swinging and the crowd’s going mad behind a bowler who is warm, who is willing to take a wicket. It makes a huge difference.”

From being 135/3 at tea, New Zealand lost seven wickets in 29.1 overs in the last session and the crowd’s involvement really helped in creating an atmosphere, Kohli said.

“We were able to pick up two, three wickets. The crowd also loves it, you engage them for the betterment of the team. A bowler who is tired… Shami would have bowled three overs but he fed off the energy and he bowled 12 more balls for the team, got another wicket.”

Asked whether this series win gives India a confidence boost before taking on Australia and South Africa, Kohli said: “I think that’s a pretty emotional question, to be honest. Because we have a long season ahead at home. We don’t play any Test cricket away from home till end of next year. So for me to give you an answer to that is very difficult.

“As a cricketer, it doesn’t make a difference if I’m playing in England or I’m playing in India, Australia or in South Africa. If you want to win, you want to win. If you don’t have the mindset to win, you’re not going to win anywhere even if you’re playing in your own backyard.

“We want to perform consistently. We want to keep winning as a team. But for me to commit to it, it’s too big a risk at this stage. We’ll prepare well. We’ll obviously look to give our best. And whatever happens, we take it like men and we move forward.”

In a lighter vein, Kohli concluded that he’s not waking up early on Tuesday.

“I can tell you what I’m doing tomorrow. I’m not getting up at 6:30 am. There’s no alarm ringing in my phone. That’s all I know about tomorrow.”

India vs New Zealand, 2nd Test: Virat Kohli says No.1 Test side will not take foot off the pedal | The Indian Express
 
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India v New Zealand, 3rd Test, Indore: Karun Nair replaces injured Dhawan for final Test against NZ


Promising Karnataka batsman Karun Nair on Monday replaced injured Shikhar Dhawan in the Indian squad for the third and final Test against New Zealand, starting at Indore on October 8.

Nair, who played two ODIs for India, got his chance to be a part of the Test squad after Dhawan was ruled out of the third Test following a minor fracture on his left thumb.

"The All-India Senior Selection Committee have named batsman Karun Nair as the replacement for injured opener Shikhar Dhawan in the Indian team," BCCI secretary Ajay Shirke said in a statement.

The left-handed Dhawan sustained the fracture after he was hit twice by New Zealand pace spearhead Trent Boult during the second Test, which India won by 178 runs to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the ongoing three-Test series at the Eden Gardens .

Dhawan, who was hit on his left thumb twice on the third day of the Test and was taken to a city hospital for scans, has been recommended 15 days rest.

"A very minor fracture has occurred and he has been recommended 15 days rest, which effectively rules him out of the next Test," said India's media manager after the match.

On Sunday, the left-handed opener took blows on his bottom hand thumb twice with the ball rising awkwardly. He survived some anxious moments, managing to open his account after 14 balls, and the swollen thumb had to be taped. He was soon rushed to a city hospital for x-ray.

He did not take the field today when New Zealand were batting in their second innings.

http://m.timesofindia.com/sports/ne...inal-Test-against-NZ/articleshow/54661691.cms
 
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Karun Nair Debut In Test :huh:sp
 
India vs New Zealand, 2nd Test Statistics: India extend unbeaten run in Tests at home


Statistical highlights on day four of the second cricket Test between India and New Zealand at Eden Gardens.


# Wriddhiman Saha (58 not out) has recorded his highest score in Tests at home, eclipsing an unbeaten 54 in the first innings of the Kolkata Test. For the first time, Saha has posted a fifty each in both innings of a Test match.

# Saha is the fifth batsman to register two unbeaten knocks in a Test match for India. He has joined Sachin Tendulkar, VVS Laxman (twice), Bapu Nadkarni and Rahul Dravid.

# Saha, after his unbeaten 58, is averaging 30-plus for the first time in Tests — his tally being 684 (ave.31.09) in 17 Tests, including a century and four fifties.

# Saha’s match tally of 112 is his second highest in a Test match next only to the 118 (104 & 14) vs West Indies at Gros Islet in August this year.

# Saha has received his first Man of the Match award in 17 Tests. Mahendra Singh Dhoni was the last Indian wicketkeeper to get the MoM award in Tests — 224 vs Australia at Chennai in February 2013.

# Saha became the first Indian wicketkeeper to record two unbeaten fifty-plus scores (54 & 58) in a Test. He became the second wicketkeeper to accomplish the feat. West Indian Gerry Alexander was the first to achieve the feat – 63 & 87 (both unbeaten innings) vs Australia at Adelaide in January 1961.

# Three other Indian wicketkeepers have recorded two fifties in a Test. Dhoni has achieved four times while Dilawar Hussain and Farokh Engineer recorded the feat once each.

# Twenty six wickets taken by the pacers is the second highest tally in a Test match at Eden Gardens, Kolkata — the highest being 30 vs Pakistan in 1998-99.

# India have contested 13 consecutive Tests without a loss at home since December 13, 2012.

# Since being beaten by England in two consecutive Tests — by 10 wickets at Mumbai and by 7 wickets at Kolkata in November/December 2012, India have won eleven and drawn two.

# At Eden Gardens, India have won 12 out of 40 Tests played (Lost 9 and Drawn 19) — success % 30.00. They have won their first Test out of three played vs New Zealand at Eden Gardens. The first two Tests between the two teams at this venue — in 1955-56 & 1964-65 — could not produce results.

# India have won three consecutive Test series vs New Zealand in India — 1-0 in 2010-11; 2-0 in 2012-13 and 2-0 (leading) in 2016-17.

# India have won nine out of 16 Tests played (lost 2 & drawn 5) under Virat Kohli’s captaincy — success % 56.25.

# Tom Latham (74) has registered his highest score vs India in Tests, eclipsing 58 in the first Test at Kanpur.

# Latham’s brilliant innings is the second highest by New Zealand opener in the fourth innings of a Test match vs India, next only to Gary Stead’s 78 in the 1999-00 Ahmedabad Test. He has posted five hundreds and nine fifties in Tests.

# 15 LBW dismissals in the Kolkata Test is a new record on Indian soil in Tests, bettering the 13 in the 1996-97 Ahmedabad Test between India and South Africa.


India vs New Zealand, 2nd Test Statistics: India extend unbeaten run in Tests at home | The Indian Express
 
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