Sports

Don’t mind being on pitches like this as long as everyone keeps their mouth shut in India and no-one is talking about pitches there: Rohit Sharma on Newlands wicket | Cricket News

India skipper Rohit Sharma called for a fair review of Indian pitches which more often than not receive criticism as compared to the pitches of other countries.
This comment came from Sharma after the Newlands Test ended in one and a half days with 33 wickets falling and India walking away with a horic victory which levelled the series 1-1.
“I don’t mind being on pitches like this as long as everyone keeps their mouth shut in India and no-one is talking about the pitches there,” Rohit said on Thursday after the match. “Yes it is dangerous, but you come here (South Africa) to challenge yourself and you must face up to it,” he added.
Sharma also called out the match referees and pointed out there’s inconsency in the way the officials rate pitches in different countries.

! ⚡️ ⚡️#TeamIndia beat South Africa 7⃣ wickets in the second #SAvIND Test to reger their first Test win at Newlands, Cape Town. 👏 👏
Scorecard ▶️ https://t.co/PVJRWPfGBE pic.twitter.com/vSMQadKxu8
— BCCI (@BCCI) January 4, 2024
“In India, when it turns on day one, people say ‘Oh, there is a puff of dust’. We need to stay neutral, especially match referees. I would love to see how the pitches are rated. I still can’t believe the World Cup final pitch was rated below standard. A player got a hundred there. They must rate pitches based on what they see, not based on countries,” he said.
“We know pitches in India will spin but people don’t like it because it turns from ball one. But if it seams from ball one, that is OK? That is not fair,” he added.
Coming to the match, India defeated South Africa seven wickets to share the honours in the two-match series. Visiting India thus completed a remarkable comeback after losing the first Test in Centurion an innings and 32 runs.
This is the shortest Test match ever in terms of overs bowled, bettering the previous best that involved Australia and South Africa at the MCG way back in 1932. A total of 106.2 overs were bowled in the match.

Related Articles

Back to top button