CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: DR. KHALID BIN MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Sports / Cricket

Dhoni defends struggling Yuvraj Singh

Published: 08 Apr 2014 - 01:16 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 07:02 pm


MIRPUR, Bangladesh: India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni sprang to team mate Yuvraj Singh’s defence after the left-hander’s struggle with the bat in the World Twenty20 final loss to Sri Lanka on Sunday.
Struggling to hit or rotate strike, Yuvraj looked a shadow of the player who was the architect of India’s 20-over World Cup victory in 2007 and the 50 overs World Cup in 2011.
The lefthander, who hit England’s Stuart Broad for six sixes in an over in the 2007 World Twenty20, used up 21 deliveries towards the end to score 11 runs, failing even to rotate strike and allow the set batsman and player-of-the-tournament Virat Kohli (77) to launch a late assault.
India managed 19 runs in the last four overs despite having eight wickets in hand and Kohli faced just eight balls in the last four overs before running himself out as India settled for a below-par 130 for four.
Dhoni conceded the last four overs probably cost India the trophy which would have completed a record limited overs treble for the 50-over World Cup and Champions Trophy holders.
“The last four is the place where you really want to score as many runs as you can. That was an area we could not capitalise (on),” Dhoni said.
He refused, however, to blame Yuvraj who, barring a half-century against Australia, had a poor tournament.
“He was trying, the thing is he was trying and that’s the most you can do. “It happens to all, not just cricketers. Yuvi tried his best, it was an off day for him. It’s not easy for a batsman to go out and straight away start slogging.”
Asked why he did not promote himself ahead of Yuvraj, Dhoni said: “We wanted a left-right combination to make it slightly difficult for the bowlers to execute their plans. That was the reason why we had Yuvi at number four.”
The India captain preferred to credit the Sri Lankan bowlers for restricting his team.
“We have to give credit to the Sri Lankan bowlers. They were looking for wide yorkers and all were perfect wide yorkers. “Other than one wide delivery, they were right on the mark which made it difficult for us to score freely.”

Lankan dies of heart attack after betting
COLOMBO: A Sri Lankan fruit seller suffered a massive heart attack and died after he lost a $300 bet that India would win the cricket World T20 tournament, police said yesterday.
S  P Kumara placed the 40,000-rupee bet on the eve of Sunday’s final, wrongly predicting that Sri Lanka would repeat its “choking” performance at three previous international tournaments and lose to India.
“He had gone to a bookmaker at Gampaha (town) and placed a fairly large bet on an Indian win and watched the match from there,” a local police official said.
“When Sri Lanka won the match, he could not believe it.”
It was the second time the vendor had backed the wrong team. Police said he bet $1,100 on Sri Lanka to clinch the last World T20 title in 2012, only to see his home country lose to the West Indies.
The vendor collapsed and was pronounced dead on admission to hospital in Gampaha just outside Colombo, said the police official who declined to be named. An inquest was told that the man had no known medical condition, and police suspect the shock of losing the bet triggered the heart attack.
Reuters/AFP