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Ishant worked overtime at the nets at the Swalec Stadium on Monday. He bowled at full steam for close to an hour as India rotated their main batsmen on two adjacent wickets close to the main square.
Ishant is clearly not in top form. He leaked runs – a record 66 against Chennai Super Kings -- during the Indian Premier League and hardly justified the price Sunrisers Hyderabad paid to buy him.
In India's first warm-up game against Sri Lanka in Birmingham on June 1, the lanky pacer conceded 41 runs in his six overs and got the wicket of Mahela Jayawardene. But Ishant doesn't want to read much into all this.
"It's not the number of runs we fast bowlers conceded but the fact that the pacers repeatedly missed the edge of the bat are signs that the ball was being pitched in the right areas," explained Ishant.
This will be Ishant's second Champions Trophy. He was part of the pace quartet in the 2009 championship in South Africa that included Ashish Nehra, R P Singh and Praveen Kumar.
Ishant picked up three wickets in two matches, both games coming at Centurion, a pitch that usually has a lot for fast bowlers. This time, the 24-year-old wants to do improve that record.
With the sun beating down and the weather expected to be good, the wickets are likely to get a lot harder and tempting for the quickies.
"I have a job to do but can't say that I am the boss of this pace attack. It's going to be a collective responsibility because there are others who will have to do as well.
"We are all of the same age and you can say I have a little more experience than Bhuvneshwar (Kumar) and Vinay Kumar," said Ishant.
He is, of course, looking for a lot of support from Irfan Pathan. The left-right combination will help in English conditions and Ishant says: "Irfan has a lot of experience too.
"He can very well use the conditions. So it won't be correct to say that I am going to front the attack alone."