Cricket World Cup 2015: Virat Kohli Believes It's the Perfect Time to Beat Australia
Virat Kohli is ready for the Australians when India face off against them in the World Cup semi-final on Thursday.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: March 24, 2015 08:58 pm IST
India's star batsman Virat Kohli feels it is the perfect time to beat Australia in Thursday's semifinal and do justice to their performance in the showpiece event. He credited the bowlers for the team's remarkable turnaround after a win-less show preceding the World Cup. (Kohli Seeks SCG Inspiration)
"There couldn't be a better time for us (to beat Australia). It is an opportunity for us to do justice to the way we have played so far in Australia, and we haven't had the results," Kohli told cricket.com.au.
India have won all their seven games going into the semifinal at the Sydney Cricket Ground, after losing the Test series 0-2 and turning up last in the tri-nation event in early part of the Australian summer.
Glenn Maxwell, earlier in the week, reminded the Indians that they are yet to beat Australia during the long tour.(Ashwin could be India's game-changer: Stuart Clark)
Kohli spoke about how the team prepared in the little time it got leading up to the 50-over showpiece event.(India vs Australia: A history of over-heated battles)
"We felt as a group that we need to step up and make corrections now. We don't really have too much time because we can't afford to go into the World Cup thinking 'okay fine, we have things to work on but we can do that over the period of time."(Darren Lehmann predicts high-scoring Australia-India semis)
"So we immediately went to work, wrote things down, what are the things we need to improve on," said Kohli, who has not crossed the 50-run mark since hitting a fine hundred in the tournament opener against Pakistan.(James Faulkner confident Australia can kill off India)
If the batsmen have played their part then the bowlers, ably led by Mohammed Shami (17 wickets in 6 games), got their act together in the quadrennial extravaganza. Kohli said the bowlers' stand-out show has made the biggest difference.
"The way the bowlers have reacted and the way they have performed with the composure and the confidence and the aggression all together, it has been wonderful to watch.
"So we expect the bowlers to step up if you want to beat quality sides in the world and the way they have done this in this World Cup has been commendable.
"We have played the right kind of cricket and the difference now is how our bowling attack has come into play in this World Cup taking 70 wickets in seven games. That's probably been the difference, and if we continue to do that we have a great chance come game day," added Kohli.