This article was first published 9 years ago

Concentrate on bowling stump-to-stump, Prasad tells Indian pacers

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Last updated on: February 05, 2015 20:46 IST

Ishant Sharma of India celebrates taking the wicket of South Africa's Henry Davids. Photograph: Duif du Toit/Gallo Images/Getty Images

Former India seamer and bowling coach Venkatesh Prasad wants the struggling pace trio of Umesh Yadav, Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Mohammed Shami to concentrate on bowling "stump-to-stump" without trying too many variations in upcoming Cricket World Cup, starting February 14.

India open their campaign against arch-rivals Pakistan at Adelaide on February 15.

"You just have to bowl stump-to-stump. There is no need to try anything extraordinary. In the shorter format, you just got to keep it tight and not give any width to the batsmen. That is the consistency our bowlers need to develop," Prasad said.

India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni sits between coach Duncan Fletcher and director of cricket Ravi Shastri for a team photo. Photograph: Philip Brown/Reuters

Prasad, who played in two ODI World Cups, in 1996 and 1999, and the bowling coach during India's victorious World T20 campaign in 2007, is a bit worried about the team's form.

"To a certain extent, yes," he answered, when asked about it.

"Having said that, the boys have got a gap of about two weeks. They have got the time to fix the flaws detected during the Australia tour. They might not have done well so far but World Cup is a new beginning.

"Just one win in a high intensity game against Pakistan would give their morale a huge boost for the subsequent games," said Prasad, who himself played stellar role in tormenting Pakistan in the two editions (1996 and 1999) that he played in.

India bowler Venkatesh Prasad (left) is greeted by team mates after dismissing Pakistani batsman Ijaz Ahmed during the World Cup quarter-final match in Bangalore. Photograph: Reuters

His animated send-off of Pakistan opener Aamir Sohail during 1996 Bangalore quarter-final is a part of Indo-Pak cricketing folklore as much as his brilliant spell of swing bowling on a cool Old Trafford afternoon in 1999.

"My performances against Pakistan have been sheer co-incidence. It is nice to hear that my name comes up whenever people speak about Indo-Pak World Cup clashes. I am sure there would be many more players who would create history," he said.

Having "been there and done that", Prasad is eagerly awaiting for the marquee match between the arch-rivals at Adelaide, hoping India will better their tournament record against Pakistan to 6-0.

"It is a big big match for fans on either side and I heard the tickets were sold out in like 20 minutes. To live up to the fans' expectations is bound to create a lot of pressure on the players. Having played at home and away against Pakistan in World Cup, I can safely say there is less pressure outside India.

"Anyway, I feel this team is very different (from past teams) and would not let pressure get the better of them," said the 45-year-old who took 196 wickets in 161 ODIs for India.

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