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Ganguly admires Aussie 'desperation to win'

Agencies

Posted online: Friday , January 11, 2008 at 1147 hrs IST
      

Canberra, January 11: : Former India captain Sourav Ganguly provided another perspective on the on-field behaviour of the under-fire Australian team, saying their conduct on the final day of the Sydney Test showed how desperate they were to win that match.

"I admired how desperate they were to win. That's why they have won so many Test matches," Ganguly said on the sidelines of the practice game against the Australian Capital Territory Invitational XI at the Manuka Oval in Canberra.

"They sense a chance of a win and would do anything to get it," he said.

Ganguly, who has led India against Australia in a World Cup final, found a lot to admire in the way Ricky Ponting's men played the game.

"When they came out on to the field for the World Cup final, they looked different. They play their cricket in a different way than the rest of the teams."

However, Ganguly said it was "not impossible" for the younger Indian players to develop that attitude.

Harbhajan Singh has been in the eye of the storm in the aftermath of the second Test with allegations of racial abuse, but his former skipper, who was not on the field when the altercation took place, doubted that the off-spinner made such a comment.

"I doubt he (Harbhajan) said that. But there is a lot of pressure in the middle during a Test match and things can come out," Ganguly said.

He was not surprised that it became a big issue once it was reported and stressed that personal abuse had no place in the game.

Australians were accused of not playing in the spirit of the game in Sydney, but Ganguly admitted he did not know what the term meant.

"I don't know what 'spirit of the game' actually means. Unless you don't make a fool of yourself on the field and don't cross the line, you should be OK," he quipped.

Ganguly's contentious dismissal on the final day of the second Test was perhaps the most controversial incident of the game.

"I edged it and immediately looked behind to see it fall short. But the umpire asked the fielder who said it was a clean catch.

"We had an agreement before the series to take the fielder's word. But the umpire should have used his judgement also and asked (square-leg umpire) Steve Bucknor or the third umpire," he said.

Indians are 0-2 down with two Tests left in the series but Ganguly said it was a "happy" team and looking forward to show "how good we are" at the pace-friendly WACA ground in Perth.

Sachin Tendulkar is the only Indian in the present touring party to play a Test match in Perth and Ganguly was banking on something special from him this time.

"I saw his hundred at WACA in 1992 and have always told him that it is his best century," Ganguly said.

However, he felt that the team's preparation for the tough tour Down Under was far from ideal.

"We needed at least two practice games before the first Test. I told the Board that one tour match was just not enough and we were underdone going into the Melbourne Test," Ganguly said.

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Emotional blackmail
by vikram on 2008-01-11 17:47:05.968551+05:30
Well said Ganguly! Most of us are emotionally blackmailing ICC on Harbhajan issue. He is a short tempered guy. This is not the first time his onfield behavior has come into question. He has had some run-ins with players of other teams. What did BCCI do when Andrew Symonds was abused in India by spectators and by some of our players? It denied everything even though there was tons of video footage as evidence. I don't believe that Harbhajan didn't say anything offensive in the middle to Symonds.BCCI is unduly pressurising ICC on the issue. It thinks by virtue of its money power it can get whatever it wants. This is corruption and sheer bullying of highest order. And please don't mix up this issue with the umpiring blunders of Steve Bucknor. In this case BCCI has every right to be mad. Had it not been for bad umpiring, India would have comfortably drawn the mattch. Who knows with the kind of unpredictability of our batting ordeer, we might have won it as well.
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Illegal "agreement"
by TSRaman on 2008-01-11 12:55:37.100412+05:30
Who are the "we" that had "an agreement to take the fielder's word"? I don't see how it can include the umpires, who are strictly bound by the laws and rules. The said "agreement" runs counter to the rules, and are therefore illegitimate, if not illegal. For example, can the two teams (along with or without the umpires) enter into an agreement for allowing no-balls or beamers? ..................Moreover, such "agreements" can make the umpires redundant -- the players may agree among themselves that all decisions will be taken by the players themselves.
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