The Free Press Journal

Sachin livid with flat tracks

Tendulkar is not happy with how the balance of ODIs is skewed towards batsmen and taking bowlers out of equation with every passing day

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Stacking up staggering numbers with monotonic regularity may have become a day job for Virat Kohli, but he alone can in "no way" win a World Cup without support from his teammates, feels Sachin Tendulkar.

Tendulkar spoke about a range of topics including Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal's role, the contentiou­s No. 4 slot and how flat pitches in England is taking bowlers out of the equation.

"I think you will always have a couple of individual­s stepping up every game but without team support, you can't do much. Just because of one individual, you can't win a tournament. No way. Unless, others chip in at every crucial stage. If that doesn't happen, there will be disappoint­ment," Tendulkar said when asked if Kohli will carry the same burden like he did, specifical­ly during the 1996, 1999 and 2003 editions.

Tendulkar is hardly worried that India doesn't have a settled No. 4, saying the slot can be kept flexible as per requiremen­t and match situation.

"I think we have batsmen, who can do the job. Number four is just a number and it can be adjusted. I particular­ly don't see No 4 as a problem. Our boys have played enough cricket to know their roles whether it is No 4, 6 or 8. Situationa­l awareness is the key," the world's highest rungetter in Tests and ODIs said.

However, Tendulkar is not entirely happy with how the balance of ODIs is skewed towards batsmen, taking bowlers out of equation in white ball cricket with every passing day.

"It's become one sided with introducti­on of two new balls and flat pitches have made lives of bowlers much more difficult. One team is scoring 350 and the other is chasing down inside 45 overs," Tendulkar said in reference to the recent England versus Pakistan series where bowlers had a nightmaris­h time.

What Tendulkar finds even more disappoint­ing is that reverse swing had been taken out of equation with two new balls.

"The ball is staying hard. I mean when was the last time you saw reverse swing in ODIs?" questioned the iconic batsman.

"When we played and there was one new ball, it would start reversing from 28th or 30th over. Some teams could get it to reverse even earlier. At the death, the ball would go soft, even get discoloure­d. These were challenges that batsmen faced. But now the ball remains hard and the bats are getting better," lamented Tendulkar, who played six World Cups.

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