India, after a poor batting display in the first two Test matches against England, produced a good batting effort on Day one of the third Test at Trent Bridge on Saturday. Riding on a fourth-wicket partnership of 159 between India captain Virat Kohli (97) and vice-captain Ajinkya Rahane (81), that spanned more than 40 overs, India ended the opening day on 307/6. Talking about the players and their improved batting performance, assistant coach Sanjay Bangar said India’s batsmen are under tremendous pressure and ‘playing for their careers’.
“…The players themselves are under tremendous pressure – they are playing for their careers. We understand that,” Bangar said at the end of first day’s play.
“To make at times when things don’t really work in your favour, it is important to maintain composure, have the same sort of sense whether things are going well or not going well. Maintaining your equilibrium, that helps,” Bangar further said.
“All of us understand clearly there is no magic wand we can work on any batsman. You have to understand the last five Test matches we played abroad have been in really trying conditions except for the Centurion Test.”
“Take the Johannesburg Test, which we from within the group believe was one of our best performances, not in terms of the number of runs but the victory we achieved in trying circumstances. So what we value is that Test win over any Test win we have had,” Bangar further added.
“And yes, handling pressure is part and parcel of any professional’s job and we try and do whatever we can do, the support we can give and the plans that we can strategise,” Bangar asserted.
Bangar said that subtle changes in technique by the batsmen helped India at Trent Bridge.
“The way Shikhar (Dhawan) made the changes to his batting, the way he reduced his bat speed, the way he played the ball later, these adjustments he made in the last 6-7 days, he should get credit. KL Rahul, too, was playing on the back foot, and he was reacting after the ball’s movement. These changes the batsmen have made make me hopeful for the rest of the series.”
“With five more innings left, if our batsmen can play in the same way, their performance graph will carry on to improve,” he added.