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India’s Suryakumar Yadav happy to temper aggression on slow tracks

Adapting to different conditions is important, says world No 1 on eve of Afghanistan tie



India's Suryakumar Yadav has returned to his form with a battling half-century against USA in the Twenty20 World Cup.
Image Credit: Reuters file

Bridgetown, Barbados: Suryakumar Yadav has proved time and again the kind of havoc he can wreak with the bat, but India’s linchpin believes being able to control that aggression is equally important on the slow pitches in the ongoing T20 World Cup.

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The group stage of the 20-team tournament, especially its US leg, proved a low-scoring affair with no batter managing to score a hundred.

Suryakumar needed 49 balls for his fifty against the United States, which is slow by the high standards of the world’s top-ranked T20 batter.

Showpiece shifts to the Caribbean

While team totals are expected to rise from the Super Eight stage onward with the tournament shifting completely to the Caribbean, Suryakumar said adaptability was as important as aggression for him.

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“If you have been the world’s No 1 batsman for the past two years, you should know how to bat according to different conditions,” Suryakumar said ahead of Thursday’s Group 1 match against Afghanistan.

“I try to do that if the wicket is difficult and there is no opportunity (to score freely).”

T20 is considered a batter-friendly format, but only three teams touched the 200-mark in the group stage of the tournament.

The star Indian batter feels it is difficult to generate force when there is no pace on the wicket.
Image Credit: AFP

“It’s difficult to generate that force when there’s no pace on the wicket and when someone has read your game nicely,” Suryakumar said.

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Smart approach

“So, at that time, you have to be very smart how you want to extend your innings.”

West Indies amassed 218-5 against Afghanistan in the final group match at Gros Islet, suggesting scoring runs would be easier on the Caribbean wickets.

“The practice wicket here is much better from what we saw in the USA,” Suryakumar said.

“It’s a little spicy, but much better.”

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