I don't worry about what the opposition is doing – Dravid

Rahul Dravid: There’s clarity in my mind about the batting order, but I see no sense in revealing my strategy before the game. © Getty Images

Rahul DravidOn getting back into the Test match scheme of things after a month of non-stop one-day cricketThat’s how international cricket is now. The [one-day] series happened very quickly, and we have to make sure we adjust and react quickly and change our mindset for the five-day game. It’s a challenge that most international cricketers face.On the likely team compositionWe’ve not decided on a final XI. That’ll be done tomorrow morning after assessing various factors like the weather. There’s clarity in my mind about the batting order, but I see no sense in revealing my strategy before the game.On the kind of challenge Sri Lanka would pose after being blown away in the ODIsI think they’ll bounce back. They’re a good team. We played very good cricket in those matches, and didn’t allow them to do so. We have to continue doing that.On Jayasuriya’s absenceLook, I don’t tend to worry about what the opposition is doing. There’s a danger of targetting one or two players and forgetting that they have other quality performers as well. Jayasuriya’s been a fantastic player for them, but we’re well aware that they have two or three young players who we need to watch for.On the threat posed by Muttiah MuralitharanMurali’s done well against us, but we’ve also had our share of success against him. I’d prefer to focus on how they will deal with Harbhajan Singh and Anil [Kumble] bowling in tandem.On whether Ganguly’s ability to bowl medium-pace might influence selectionSourav has been bowling a fair bit lately, and we will certainly be thinking of that as an option.On the pitchIt looks good, but might take some turn as the match goes on.On Sehwag not practicing yesterday and doing little work todayHe has a slight strain in his left shoulder. Nothing too serious. It was just a precautionary thing [to skip practice].On what he expected from the Chennai crowdIt’s always a great place to play. We’ve had some memorable matches here, and the crowd has always responded to good performances. It would have been very disappointing for them to see the ODI washed out, and I hope the weather holds over the next few days so that they get a good game of cricket.On whether having so many seniors back in the side complicated thingsIt makes it simpler. There are a few ex-captains there, and they will certainly help out with advice. I can’t do it all on my own.Greg ChappellOn how he approached his first Test in India as coachI know it’s a cliché, but it’s just another game. The cricket doesn’t change regardless of where you’re playing. The critical things, the basics, stay the same, and only the nuances change with the conditions.On Ganguly’s return to the teamIf he’s in the team, he will be a very important member. He’s fitted back into the group very well.

McGrath takes aim at 'aeroplane' Shoaib

A plane or a show-pony?© Getty Images

According to Glenn McGrath, Shoaib Akhtar’s king-size run-up has more to do with his love of playing to the gallery than a desire to bowl fast. McGrath weighed into the issue after Bob Woolmer, Pakistan’s coach, had earlier pleaded with Shoaib to cut down on his approach, which slowed the game down and also drastically reduced the chances of him bowling long spells.And while McGrath accepted the fact that Shoaib, on his good days, could run through a side, he pointedly suggested that he was also capable of bowling “a heap of rubbish”. McGrath took 8-24 in the second innings at the WACA in Perth, demolishing Pakistan with the steepling bounce and accuracy that has underpinned his charge to 472 wickets in just 104 Tests.And while Shoaib laughed off suggestions that he pare down a run-up that starts in the shadow of the sightscreen – “Can a plane take off without a run-up?” he asked enigmatically – McGrath told the that the response was typical of Pakistan’s premier bowler. “He’s a showman, and that’s what he loves,” said McGrath. “Cutting that run-up down might take a bit away from that and take a bit away from who he is. Maybe that’s why he’s holding on.”I don’t know what I can say I am, a jump-jet or a helicopter or something. I think he could bowl just as quick off a shorter run. They say it’s [Akhtar’s run-up] 33 metres. Mine’s 23 metres and he looks a good 17 or 20 metres behind me, so I’d say it’s 40-plus. When you’re bowling 6-minute overs it puts pressure on the other guys to get through their overs, plus you can only get through three or four overs at top pace before you really start feeling the pinch.”McGrath also reckoned that Shoaib needed to take fresh stock of his priorities, given how much the team relied on him. “From a personal point of view, my goal was always to be the best bowler, not so much the quickest, whereas I’m sure Shoaib’s major and only goal is to be the quickest bowler in the world, if not of all time,” he said. “He’s the type of bowler that can just rip through sides. He’s got that potential there but then he’s got the potential to bowl a heap of rubbish as well.”But having gone through a none-too-subtle sledge ahead of the Boxing Day Test,McGrath admitted that, ultimately, run-ups were dictated by a bowler’s sense of well-being. “At the end of the day, a run-up has got to feel good for the bowler. I shortened my run-up and it felt ordinary, so I had to go back to my old one. Shoaib might be the same.”

Dravid and Laxman guide Rest of India to three-wicket win

Rest of India 202 and 340 for 7 (Dravid 121, Laxman 99) beat Mumbai 297 and 244 by 3 wickets
Scorecard Day 3 Bulletin


That special feeling: Sourav Ganguly celebrates after hitting the winning runs © AFP

Rest of India almost botched up what seemed to be a comfortable run-chase, but held their nerve to eke out a three-wicket win in the Irani Trophy match at Chennai, with a day to spare. A fourth-innings target of 340 was expected to be a tall order – especially on a pitch where no team had topped 300 in three innings, but a Rahul Dravid masterclass of 121, and a delightful, stroke-filled 99 from VVS Laxman, ensured that Rest of India were comfortably placed through most of the day.Through the first two sessions, Rest of India lost just one wicket, that of L Balaji, the nightwatchman, for a doughty 26. With Dravid and Laxman getting increasingly authoritative in the midst of their 168-run partnership, the Mumbai attack began to wilt, with leg-stump half-volleys being served with monotonous regularity after tea.Then, Laxman prodded at Sairaj Bahutule and was snaffled by Vinayak Mane at silly point just one short of a hundred (291 for 4), and Rest of India suddenly – and quite inexplicably – lost their way. Bahutule, who had until then been the most innocuous of Mumbai’s bowlers, struck again, forcing Dravid to inside-edge onto his pads. Vinayak Samant dived in front of the stumps to take a smart catch, and Mumbai sniffed a comeback. Yuvraj Singh slammed a cover-drive off Ramesh Powar, then rushed down the pitch for more heroics, but only managed a leading edge to Ajit Agarkar at point. And when Parthiv Patel gloved a lifter to Mane at short leg off Bahutule (312 for 7), Rest of India had lost four wickets for 21 runs, and were still 28 away from victory.However, Ganguly and Kumble stemmed the rot, mixing dogged defence with a few bold strokes. Kumble drove Bahutule down the ground, while Ganguly rocked back and pulled Powar to the midwicket fence, before slamming a full-toss to the same region to get the winning runs.Earlier, Dravid put forth yet another utterly compelling batting display, much like many of the innings he has played for India over the last couple of years. He was secure in defence, always getting in line and presenting the full face of the bat, and latched on anything off target. Sachin Tendulkar tried all the tricks in the bag – Nishit Shetty bowled a few overs of left-arm spin, while Tendulkar bowled both legspin and seamers – but nothing could budge Dravid. Powar, who had dismissed Dravid in the first innings, was dispatched for two sixes over wide long-on early in the piece to set the tone.Dravid’s resistance was entirely expected, but Balaji was a revelation. Though he did play and miss a few times against the seamers in the morning, he remained unruffled, studiously letting balls go outside off and defending resolutely at anything directed at the stumps. Frustrated by their lack of success, both Ajit Agarkar and Aavishkar Salvi banged in plenty of short balls, but Balaji simply dropped his wrists and swayed out of the way. Balaji was finally nailed on the sweep shot by Powar, but that only set the scene for Dravid and Laxman to take centrestage.Laxman had had a horror match so far, scoring 5 off 53 balls in the first innings, and then dropping a clanger off Tendulkar on the third day. Today, he redeemed himself, stroking the ball fluently on both sides of the wicket. He started off slightly tentatively, slashing one over the slips for four off Agarkar, but soon settled into his groove. Bahutule’s round-the-wicket, into-the-rough bowling was handled with excellent footwork, as Laxman either flicked it to leg or made room to drive through extra-cover. And when Powar was brought back shortly before tea, both Dravid and Laxman dealt almost exclusively in boundaries: Laxman stroked a couple of full-tosses for fours, then took a single and watched as Dravid struck two magnificent sixes, one over wide long-on and the other over the bowler’s head. Twenty-one came off that over, and the contest seemed settled. Then came the rush of nerves, and the mini-drama.

I think we should win the N.U.L. says Mike Burns

Despite having to make a long journey to the north west with his family later in the day to visit relatives for Christmas, Somerset all rounder Mike Burns was at the County Ground early on Friday morning.Mike, who will be thirty three in a couple of months time, enjoyed his best ever season in 2001 and played a major part in helping the Cidermen enjoy the most successful season in their history.Mike told me, “Following the end of the season I’ve had a couple of weeks off, but since then I’ve been training in the Academy Fitness Centre three or four times a week.”He went on, “I’ve just done a course so that I can use the heavier weights that we now have in our new fitness room. I want to stay ahead of the game.” Mike carried on, “Since the end of the season I’ve trained harder than ever using some of the new equipment that we have got and I’m fitter.”He continued, “All of the lads have been training very hard. Now that we have got to the heights we want to stay there, we won’t be sitting back on our laurels.Everyone is making an effort to stay on top.”What was 2002 going to hold for the club I asked him. “If we get Matt Bulbeck back then we will have three quality seamers. His return to full fitness is just what we are looking for, and he will help to make Keith Dutch more effective. The success of last season will help to make the fringe players want to try harder and become part of that winning team.”He went on, “If we can get up and be near the leaders of County Championship early on then hopefully we have got a chance of staying there and being there or thereabouts at the end of the season.” Mike told me that he felt that Somerset had their best chance in the Norwich Union League next season. “We’ve got to push hard in the N.U.L. because that is the one that I think we should win. We have had two lopsided seasons-in 2000 we started well and fell away badly, then last season we picked up well at the end and ended fourth place.”He continued, “In the cups you can always have an off day, but in the N.U.L. you should only lose 2 or 3 games.”When Mike returns, early in the New Year he has to undergo an operation on his ankle. “I was carrying an injury for the last month of the season,” he told me and continued,” I’ve been receiving treatment but it hasn’t responded so I will be going into the Nuffield in Taunton for the operation. I will have to rest my ankle for a couple of weeks, but it wont stop me coming into the gym!” After we spoke Mike disappeared into the “dungeon” as the new fitness room which is situated away from the Academy Centre has been nicknamed by the players, for his final work before the festive break.

Gloucestershire left with sense of inferiority

Northants ended the second day at Cheltenham looking for a convincing win over Gloucestershire to lift them clear of the bottom rung of the second division.A decisive breakthrough in the evening session saw them reduce the home side of 77-4 still 466 behind on a College Ground wicket showing signs of wear.Having built their first innings score of 543 around the meaty blows of their England-qualified Australian Jeff Cook as he made 137 in four and a half hours, Northants then found the right mix of pace and spin to leave Gloucestershire with a sense of inferiority.This was only too evident when the makeshift opening pair of Dominic Hewson and Rob Cunliffe were both back in the pavilion by the end of the seventh over, Hewson not offering a shot to a ball which went straight through into his stumps and Cunliffe edging to Matt Haynes in the slips.Gloucestershire, for all their earnest approach, had never found the swing Darren Cousins uncovered to claim those two wickets but then the pitch had been deadened by several days’ rain and then scuffed as the bowlers ran through.With the openers gone with only 18 scored Northants’ skipper Haynes quickly brought Tony Penberthy on at the College Lawn end and his medium pace gave him two quick wickets.Home captain Mark Alleyne has been largely out of form with the bat since leading the England A tour in the winter and like Hewson he made no attempt to play the ball which went through to strike his back pad, departing for six to his 12th ball.Then Matt Windows clipped a ball off his pads to Jason Brown and at 40-4 there was a possibility a demoralised side might not last the 35 overs of the evening session.They did by promoting the combative Jack Russell to encourage that first-season batsman Chris Taylor. The wicket-keeper drew the flak leaving Taylor to strike out a determined 27 with four boundaries although the partnership was lucky to survive when Adrian Rollins at short leg juggled with a prod by Russell but failed to hold on to it at the second attempt.Where Gloucestershire struggled Northants had been composed building a variety of solid innings around Cook who waited patiently for the right ball.Ninety two of his runs came in boundaries before he was undone by a ball from his fellow-Australian Ian Harvey which cut in to find his middle stump.Cook in the 209 balls he faced saw the score rise from 131-1 when he went in to 416-5 when he left with Northants by then on course for a maximum five batting points.They sailed past their previous highest total in matches between these counties – 516 at Bristol back in 1913 – as their last five batsmen put on 127 with David Ripley unbeaten on 48.The best of the home bowling came from the uncapped Mike Cawdron who kept up a whippy pace and line through several spells to finish with three for 70 off 28 overs.

Celtic: Kieran Maguire makes VAR claim

Finance expert Kieran Maguire believes that Celtic will be happy to pay for VAR in the Scottish Premiership, as per Football Insider.

The Lowdown: Vote expected

Reports last month suggested that both the Hoops and their Glasgow arch-rivals are pushing for VAR to be introduced in Scotland.

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It is thought to cost each club close to £100,000 per season, or around £1.2m combined, with a vote expected to take place in the spring. That figure has increased from £60,000 per season, and Maguire has been having his say on the now seven-figure total cost.

The Latest: Maguire’s comments

Maguire, who contributes for Sky Sports, was talking to Football Insider, who led with a title suggesting that the rest of the league will ‘hate’ VAR coming into play.

He admitted that it isn’t a surprise to see both Celtic and Rangers pushing for a VAR deal due to their financial power, saying:

“You can understand it from the perspective of other clubs.

“Other clubs are operating on total revenue of around about £5m per season.

“That means £100,000 would be two per cent of total revenue going towards VAR, which isn’t insignificant.

“But Celtic and Rangers are generating much more than that, meaning it is less significant.

“For them, VAR could be the difference between coming 2nd and winning the title.”

The Verdict: The right move?

You can see why both Celtic and Rangers are pushing for VAR, especially following the Hoops’ impressive financial figures in 2021.

As Maguire mentions, the implementation of the technology could prove to be the difference in who wins the title in subsequent seasons, with the current campaign showing how close the two sides are now.

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Hopefully, other top-flight clubs will vote in favour of the technology, despite the £100,000-a-year cost, and this topic could be one to keep an eye on over the coming months.

In other news: Devlin reveals that Celtic ‘definitely want’ to sign ‘incredible’ £22k-p/w international

The real challenge starts now, says Miraz

Mehedi Hasan Miraz, Bangladesh Under-19 captain who led the team to a third-place finish, wants to improve his overall skills before he vies for a place in the senior team. Miraz, scored 242 runs in six innings and also picked up 12 wickets at 17.66 to earn the Man of the Tournament award.”I just ended my career at the Under-19 level and like every other cricketer, I also dream to play at the highest level for my country,” Miraz said. “But this requires perseverance and hard work, and I want to develop myself as a better cricketer in the time I will get to transform myself.”It is a big achievement for me to win the player-of-the-tournament award; not just for me, but for the whole team and the nation too. Sixteen teams participated in the event and our team came third and among them I got the award. This is actually massive.”Miraz said that the Bangladesh team could have played the final but for an inspired West Indies side who beat them in the semi-final in Mirpur. Now he wants to move forward quickly and could possibly play for South Zone in the Bangladesh Cricket League first-class tournament.”We had a great unit too and deserved to win the trophy,” he said. “But a few mistakes cost us the [semi-final] match. We respected the West Indies but we had the confidence in us. We just couldn’t translate it into action.”I think there were expectations on me because I played well. I will need to hold on to the belief that I can carry myself forward. I am not satisfied with these achievements only. I want to go up the ladder and give some moments of happiness to my nation.”

Ponting to captain Tasmania in Pura Cup

Ricky Ponting will lead Tasmania in a rare Pura Cup appearance © Getty Images

Ricky Ponting will captain Tasmania in their Pura Cup match at home against South Australia starting on Monday. It will be Ponting’s second Pura Cup outing in two seasons after his international duties kept him out of state first-class action for three consecutive summers before last year.Joining Ponting in the side will be Ben Hilfenhaus, who missed the opening Pura Cup match while on tour with Australia in India, while Tim Paine and Chris Duval have been omitted. The 12-man squad also includes Luke Butterworth, who had a hamstring strain that kept him out of the Tigers’ Pura Cup opener.Butterworth is coming off an amazing all-round effort for Tasmania’s Second XI against Victoria’s Second XI last week. He struck 116 in the first innings and 223 in the second, also collecting 5 for 40 in Victoria’s first innings to prove that his Man-of-the-Match performance in last summer’s Pura Cup final was no fluke.Tasmania squad Michael Di Venuto, Michael Dighton, Ricky Ponting (capt), Travis Birt, George Bailey, Daniel Marsh, Luke Butterworth, Sean Clingeleffer (wk), Brett Geeves, Brendan Drew, Adam Griffith, Ben Hilfenhaus.South Australia squad Matthew Elliott, Shane Deitz, Mark Cosgrove, Nathan Adcock (capt), Darren Lehmann, Andy Delmont, Graham Manou (wk), Ryan Harris, Mark Cleary, Jason Gillespie, Dan Cullen, Shaun Tait.

Warne and Hussey sink England

Australia 513 and 4 for 168 (Hussey 61*, Ponting 49) beat England 6 for 551 and 129 (Collingwood 22*, Warne 4-49) by six wickets
Scorecard and ball-by-ball commentary
How they were out – England
How they were out – Australia

Mike Hussey celebrates hitting the winning runs © Getty Images

Australia have won the second Test at Adelaide and taken a 2-0 lead in the Ashes, after Shane Warne bounced back to form on a sensational final day to spark a dramatic England collapse. From 1 for 59 overnight, England lost their last nine wickets for 60 in 42 panic-stricken overs, with Warne right in the thick of things taking 4 for 27 in an unbroken 26-over spell. And then, needing 168 to win in an extended final session, Australia romped home with 3.1 of their 36 overs to spare. It was left to the ICC one-day Player of the Year, Mike Hussey, to crack the winning runs in an unbeaten 61.It was a day dredged straight from the pit of English Ashes misery, and it was sparked, inevitably, by Warne. After his first-innings haul of 1 for 167, it was questioned whether he could ever again be the force of old, especially given the savage treatment that Kevin Pietersen had meted out on him in the course of his 158. And yet, the old showman proved that it’s never too late for another encore. With England wobbling after two early setbacks, he reverted to his attacking line from over the wicket and bowled Pietersen round the legs with a prodigious first-ball legbreak that pitched in the rough and exploded onto off stump. It was a seminal moment, and England’s resolve crumbled in an instant.Pietersen had gone for 2, England had lost three wickets for four runs in three overs, and they had absolutely no place to turn. Andrew Strauss had fallen to a dubious catch at short leg and Ian Bell to a suicidal run-out – both dismissals inspired by Warne – and the combination of nerves and bad karma swept through the dressing-room like a bushfire. Australia went in for the kill, with sweepers on both boundaries to asphyxiate the runs and slips in place to pile on the pressure, and no-one other than the steadfast Paul Collingwood had any answer to the onslaught.

The start of the rot: Shane Warne appeals successfully for Andrew Strauss’s wicket © Getty Images

Andrew Flintoff certainly had no clue how to approach the situation. With his mind seemingly everywhere but on the job, he swished at a succession of wide deliveries from Brett Lee and eventually snicked one through to Adam Gilchrist, and Lee needed just four balls after the break to set Geraint Jones up for the big outswinging half-volley that he slapped straight to Matthew Hayden at gully. Ashley Giles – included in England’s line-up as an insurance policy for a day exactly like this – then lasted just eight deliveries before Warne squared him up with a big ripper and Hayden again pouched the catch at slip.Collingwood by now was entrenched, starved of run-scoring opportunities and rapidly running out of partners. Matthew Hoggard dug in as best he could, but having ground his innings out for 24 obdurate deliveries, Warne served up a thinly disguised googly that took the inside-edge of an ambitious swish. And Glenn McGrath, who had been brooding in the outfield for three hours and 20 minutes, struck in his first over to end Steve Harmison’s brief resistance.James Anderson hung around with Collingwood for 10 precious overs, but runs were at an absolute premium, with England managing just three boundaries in the entire day’s play. McGrath eventually picked Anderson off lbw for 1 from 28 balls, leaving Collingwood high and dry, unbeaten on 22 from a strokeless but steadfast 119 balls.Scenting blood, Australia made a breathless start. Justin Langer signalled his intentions by dancing down the wicket to Matthew Hoggard’s second delivery, and clubbed it off a good length through midwicket for four. But Hoggard had his revenge in his next over, when Langer threw the kitchen sink at a wide one but cut it straight into Ian Bell’s midriff at point.

Ricky Ponting eased any Australian nerves with 49 © Getty Images

Hayden came and went in a similar manner, thumping Flintoff for two big boundaries before top-edging an attempted pull Collingwood, running back from midwicket. Australia had slipped to 2 for 33 after six overs, but Ponting joined forces with Hussey, who had been promoted above Damien Martyn in the Australian order, and the pair switched instantly to one-day mode, nudging the singles and keeping the run-rate ticking over.As Giles entered the attack, Flintoff posted sweepers on the off and leg side and attempted to cut off the easy singles behind square, but Australia’s batsmen were too canny with their one-day expertise, and milked Giles out of the attack with a series of expert dabs and reverse-sweeps. Hoggard returned with the keeper standing up but had to retreat after conceding ten runs in one over, most of them dabbed through third man.England’s shoulders began to droop as Flintoff’s captaincy became increasingly lacklustre. Anderson got one to kick off a good length to Hussey, but the edge eluded slip and raced away for another boundary, and though they briefly came back into the reckoning when Strauss clung onto two catches in four balls to see off Ponting for 49 and Martyn for 5, the final insult came when a hyperactive Pietersen fielded a relay throw from Hoggard at long-on, and hurled it over the boundary to give away seven precious runs.As the replay screen counted down the runs required, it could have been a replay of the closing stages at Edgbaston or Old Trafford last summer – with one prominent exception. The fight had gone out of England long before Hussey picked off the winning runs through cover point. It is ironic, given the disdain they have shown for one-day cricket this year, that their Ashes campaign might just have been ended by a one-day style capitulation.Moment of the Day
Kevin Pietersen’s hubristic sweep shot against Shane Warne, the man he believed he had “beaten”. With England rocking after two quick wickets, KP’s default answer was another dose of aggression. But he was beaten by the drift, and embarrassed by the rip as he lost his off stump from around his legs.Shot of the Day
Justin Langer’s kitchen-sink smite over midwicket off the second ball of Australia’s run-chase. He danced down the track and belted Matthew Hoggard, baseball-style. It established the tempo of the chase immediately, and ensured that England were as timid in the field as they were with the bat.Stonewaller of the Day
Paul Collingwood survived 119 balls for his 22 not out, gritting his teeth and clinging on for dear life as England’s innings collapsed around him. It wasn’t pretty, and in the final analysis it wasn’t very effective either. But all the while that Warne and Brett Lee were howling at the door, it was England’s only hope of salvation.Innings of the Day
Michael Hussey was thrust up the order ahead of Damien Martyn, and produced the sort of cool, calm, collected innings that has been a hallmark of his award-winning one-day performances. He found the gaps with ease, he turned ones into twos, and he clattered the bad balls with alacrity.Cock-up of the Day
The run-out of Ian Bell. It was a moment reminiscent of Mark Ramprakash’s aberration during their 46 all out at Trinidad in 1993-94 – the moment when mild alarm morphed into full-blown panic, for all of Andrew Flintoff’s protestations to the contrary.Quote of the Day
Channel Nine’s jingoistic on-pitch reporter, Ian Healy, summing up the emotional scenes at the end of Australia’s chase. “This Ashes clash twists and turns like a massive python,” he said with an utterly straight face.

'Rahul Dravid is doing a great job as captain' – Ganguly

Sourav Ganguly says he will perform any role if picked for the Indian team © Getty Images

Sourav Ganguly, the deposed Indian captain, praised his successor Rahul Dravid and declared that he was prepared to play in any position and perform any role if taken back into the national squad.”Rahul Dravid is doing a great job as captain,” Ganguly told mediapersons after a practice session in Kolkata. Asked how he rated his chances of coming back to the squad in the near future, Ganguly said, “I am playing domestic cricket. I am laying stress on fitness. My past record is also there.” Asked if he was eyeing the slot of an allrounder to make a comeback to the squad, Ganguly said he was prepared to fit into any role the team desired of him. “I have taken 14/15 wickets in the Duleep Trophy. I also scored a hundred. I am willing to play at any position. I am prepared to perform any role that the team wants me to.”On whether his confidence was boosted by Ranbir Singh Mahendra’s, the BCCI president, comments that the doors of the Indian team have not been shut on him, Ganguly said, “I don’t want to react to this. I only want to continue scoring runs. But yes, it does feel good to hear such encouraging words”.Cautious not to court any controversy, Ganguly skipped queries on Virender Sehwag’s form, and whether he would make any changes in the squad if he returned as captain. “Performance of the team does not depend on the coach or captain or any individual player. All the players in the squad have to perform well for the team to come up with a good show,” he said.Ganguly, however, dismissed the criticism that he had problems with short pitched deliveries, saying his record was there for all to see. “Every batsman has his weak spot. But despite his weakness, if one has scored 14,000 to 15,000 runs in top class cricket, then I think nobodyshould complain,” he said. Ganguly also said it was perfectly logical that performance should be the yardstick in deciding team compositions. “Not only Sourav, Dravid or Sachin (Tendulkar), all the players have to perform well to be picked for the team.”

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