India confident of passing Sydney test


FE Team | Published: March 26, 2015 00:00:00 | Updated: November 30, 2026 06:01:00


SYDNEY: India\'s batsman Rohit Sharma speaks during a press conference here Wednesday ahead of their Cricket World Cup semi-final match against Australia at the Sydney Cricket Ground. — AFP Photo

SYDNEY, Mar 25 (AFP): India will go into Thursday's World Cup semi-final against Australia in Sydney confident of success irrespective of whether the wicket took turn or assisted fast bowlers, opener Rohit Sharma said.
The wear and tear at the end of a long season was evident when the covers were removed at the Sydney Cricket ground Wednesday, revealing a dry, brown pitch that would gladden India more than their rivals.
South African spinners Imran Tahir and JP Duminy shared seven wickets to bowl out Sri Lanka for 133 in the quarter-final at the SCG last week, setting up a nine-wicket win for the Proteas.
But the bat dominated the ball in previous World Cup games at the venue, with Australia piling up 376 for nine against Sri Lanka and South Africa smashing 408 for five off the West Indies' attack.
Australian coach Darren Lehmann predicted a high-scoring game, but Sharma said India were not sweating over the nature of the wicket.
"It does not worry us what sort of wicket we get because we are confident of doing well on any surface," said Sharma, who scored a century in the quarter-final against Bangladesh in Melbourne.
"We have taken 70 wickets in seven matches, bowled out the opposition every time, so we know what we need to do.
"Our seamers have done well and so have the spinners. We are ready for anything that we get."
Mahendra Singh Dhoni's men have confounded critics by recovering from a winless bilateral tour of Australia before the World Cup to brush aside all-comers in the tournament.
Starting with two wins against Pakistan and South Africa, India won all six group matches to top Pool B and then downed spirited Bangladesh by 109 runs in the quarter-finals.
Besides bowling out their rivals in all games, India have piled up 300-plus scores every time they have batted first.
India have beaten Australia just once in 35 years in a one-day international at the Sydney Cricket Ground and the hosts have won all six semi-finals they have contested since the inaugural event in 1975.
But Sharma, who hit a record one-day score of 264 against Sri Lanka last year, said the past will have no bearing Thursday's result and insisted Australia were not unbeatable.
"Of course we can win, no question about it," he said. "Australia is a good batting side but they struggled against good quality bowling when they played New Zealand or Pakistan.

Share if you like