Ganguly, Ponting play mind games
Australian captain Ricky Ponting has declared that Indians would not find Shane Warne an easy proposition when they tour the sub-continent in October.
India and Australia might be slated to clash in a Test series only later in the year, but the mind games are already on with Ricky Ponting declaring that Indians would not find Shane Warne an easy proposition when they tour the sub-continent in October.

"Shane has not done well on the last two tours to India but I know for a fact he was battling a few niggles in the body. But now he is in top shape, the ball is coming out right from his hands and he sure would be a factor when we tour in October," said the aggressive Australian captain after the tri-series match with India was abandoned due to rain.
Indian captain Sourav Ganguly acknowledged Warne to be a big enough factor in world cricket but felt his batsmen would take a lot of confidence going into the series because of how they have done in the past against the leg-spinner.
"He is obviously their key bowler. He would make a difference to any side. But we have played him well over the years. Still, he is the kind of bowler who can win matches any day," he said.
Warne's return to international cricket after a one-year ban for a positive dope test before the 2003 World Cup has been nothing short of sensational.
He caught up with Sri Lankan spin wizard Muttiah Muralitharan as the leading Test wicket-taker for a while and is now poised to overtake the Kandy man who has been ruled out of action for the rest of the year due to a shoulder problem.
"They indeed did well in Sri Lanka and we have to be up for it. Still, we would now be meeting them three times in a year and that's enough, frankly speaking."
Indeed, Australians proved that they had adapted brilliantly to the sub-continental conditions of Sri Lanka where Shane Warne made a remarkable return to Test cricket with 26 wickets at 20.03 from the three games.
India and Australia are the biggest draw in world cricket and, despite India's recent reverses in one-day cricket, they remain a potent side in the longer format of the game.
"We have performed well in Test cricket over the last two years. We hope to do it again when they come to India. I feel we have been good in Test cricket in the last two years," said Ganguly.
The Australians have not won a series in India since 1969-70 and the burning ambition of their former captain Steve Waugh to conquer the 'Last Frontier' remained unfulfilled.
"We have to really play them to know how it is going to be any different in the absence of Steve Waugh. Steve was a legend and people in India used to respect him. It's going to be a new side for them with young boys. But you can never take Australia lightly," Ganguly said.
Ganguly believed that the four-Test series in October-November would the biggest drawcard for the year in the game.
"That's going to be probably the biggest series of the year. We both are looking forward to play each other. We did well with them on the last two tours — in 2001 — and then in Australia. If we can do it again, that would be very good for the team."
He did not wish to draw any inference from the Australian batting in the tri-series match on Monday when they were restricted to 175 for 7.
"It was a 30-over game so you can't read much into it. The batsmen were trying to get on and hardly had any time to settle down. It was not one of the easiest wickets to bat on as well, so I wouldn't make much of it really."
Ganguly, however, expressed concern over the spate of injuries which has plagued his reign of five years.
"The injuries are a worry. We play more one-dayers than any other team in the world. That's pretty hard on the body. We are travelling and turning up and playing one-day cricket which is tough."

E-Paper

