Bowling one no-ball doesn't make me a villain - Ashwin
Ravichandran Ashwin, India's off-spinner, has said that bowling one
of the two no-balls in India's all-important World T20 semi-final match
against West Indies doesn't make him a villain.
Mumbai: India off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin on Friday said that he
should not be made a villain for bowling one of the two no-balls which
proved to be a crucial factor in India's World Twenty20 semifinal loss
to the West Indies.
Ashwin's was one of the no balls which gave Man of the Match Lendl
Simmons a reprieve and helped him anchor West Indies' successful chase
of a stiff target of 193 at the Wankhede Stadium here.
The day I went back home my dog had heat stroke. He had fits. It just
showed me what is more important and what is very very important in
life. I did not turn up a piece of paper for next three days. I haven't
read about what people had said," Ashwin said ahead of his new franchise
Rising Pune Supergiants' opening IPL game against title-holders Mumbai
Indians t
."There have been good enough journalists and knowledgeable people
who said I had not bowled a no-ball for ages and to have bowled one no
ball, I don't become a villain.
If that's the perception I don't know how to counter that," the
bowler said at a media conference.Ashwin was widely castigated in the
media for bowling a no-ball - being a spinner - off which he had Simmons
caught at point, only for the batsman to escape on 15 and play a
match-winning innings that knocked India out of the World T20 nine days
ago
.Ashwin took umbrage when a scribe asked him how he felt bowling with
the wet ball because of dew, as the West Indies inched closer to India's
total."When there was dew I did not bowl. It's better you ask someone
who actually bowled, to be very honest. I don't know how it felt with
the dew on. It's very amusing because with the first 12 balls I bowled,
I created a wicket opportunity as well," he retorted.Asked further that
it was captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni who had said at the post match media
conference that the dew had affected his team's bowling attack, Ashwin
answered, "I don't know what the captain said."At the end of the
conference, Ashwin confronted the journalist who asked him about the dew
factor to find out the publication he represented."I am not blaming you.
But you should be responsible about what you write as millions of
people read it and form an opinion," said the player to the non-plussed
correspondent.Dhoni had blamed dew and the two no-balls bowled by Ashwin
and then Hardik Pandya, who too had Simmons caught off a foot
infringement after the batsman had reached 50, squarely for his bowlers'
poor display in his post-match media presser.
Dew Factor"You have to realise it was half an hour early start. A bad
toss to lose. So, when they started batting the first few overs were
fine, but after that there was a considerable amount of dew which meant
the spinners couldn't bowl how they would have liked to," Dhoni had
said."It was coming on nicely and the ball was getting wet, so that was
the difference between the first innings and second innings.
The surface had some assistance for the spinners, it was gripping
(when India batted), but in the second innings there wasn't much in it
for them. It was quite difficult to score 190 (batting first)," were
Dhoni's words.Looking forward to playing for a new franchise under Dhoni
who had captained him and the suspended Chennai Super Kings for eight
years, Ashwin said he had been waiting for the new challenge.
"It's a fresh start, it's a new team for me and it's going to be a
new challenge which I had always been looking forward to. It's very
important to get into the new environment, see how much you can get
better and add value to the team. It's very exciting and I am looking
forward to it."Conceding that it was a bit difficult for the Indian
squad's players to plunge into the IPL following back-to-back campaigns
in the Asia Cup and World T20, Ashwin said the difference was that the
T20 league was very fast-paced."It's going to be difficult, no hiding
it. It's going to be taxing - mentally and physically.
The thing with IPL is it's very fast paced."If you get in and if you
try and beat your own odds and try to look for improvements during this
time, it's going to help you as a cricketer and hold you in good stead
throughout the year," said the off-spinner.According to Ashwin, T20
cricket has changed a lot over the last year or two with batsmen
becoming more aggressive right through the inings and it was important
for teams like India to be abreast of where it was heading."In general I
think T20 cricket has gone a notch up over the last year or two.
The game has definitely evolved and it's very important to keep an
eye on how much it has evolved."
He also mentioned the last over six-hitting heroics of West Indian
Carlos Brathwaite that knocked out England's hopes in the WT20 final at
Kolkata."When you saw the last over in the (WT20) final, Carlos
Brathwaite (of West Indies) just came in and smashed it (ball for four
consecutive sixes). It's getting into a zone, into a power game.
People are not holding back and are going through from the first over
to the 20th over."May be the par scores will shift suddenly and by the
time we realise, it could be a couple of years.
The team that realises that and keeps going and catches the new breed
of cricket that's being played around the world, it's going to help it
(get benefited).""It also helps that there are other leagues
- Caribbean Premier League (West Indies), the Big Bash (in
Australia), all these things are contributing to the scale of T20
cricket," he added. |