Despite Eng double, Harmanpreet says team must reset for home World Cup
Harmanpreet led from the front with her seventh women’s ODI century as India defeated England by 13 runs in a high-scoring decider here on Tuesday to clinch the three-match series 2-1, following their 3-2 triumph in the WT20Is earlier.
PTI
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King Charles III interacts with Indian women’s cricket team captain Harmanpreet Kaur, Smriti Mandhana, Jemimah Rodrigues and others (PTI)
Chester-le-Street, 23 July
A double series win in England may have boosted the confidence of the
Indian women’s team ahead of a home World Cup but skipper Harmanpreet Kaur said
her side will need to "start from ball one" when they return home to
prepare for the global showpiece.
Harmanpreet led from the front with her seventh women’s ODI century as
India defeated England by 13 runs in a high-scoring decider here on Tuesday to
clinch the three-match series 2-1, following their 3-2 triumph in the WT20Is
earlier.
India next face seven-time reigning world champions Australia in a three-match WODI series at home beginning 14 September, before co-hosting the Women’s World Cup with Sri Lanka from 30 September to 2 November.
"Well, every game and every situation is different. Today was a
totally different situation and different pitch, different atmosphere. But in
home, conditions will be different," Harmanpreet, who was adjudged both
player of the match and player of the series, said at the post-match press
conference here on Tuesday.
"But yeah, whenever you win, those things can always give you a
positive mindset and keep you in a good place.
"But whenever you are playing the next game, it's always you have
to start from ball one and I think this series will definitely give us a lot of
confidence. But again, when we go back, we have to start again things from the
ball one."
Asked what pleased her most from the England tour and what areas the
team still needs to improve ahead of the World Cup, Harmanpreet replied:
"Well, if you see our team is really working hard for so many years and
this is the time where we are getting that reward.
"I am really happy all the girls are coming up and coming up with
positive mindset and working really hard on their fitness.
"Right now, the kind of fitness you need in international cricket.
We have understood a lot of things in the past few years and right now, just
trying to pass that benchmark and setting ourselves in that position where
people can talk about women's cricket, people can take women's cricket really
seriously back home."
Asked whether India and Australia now stand a step above the rest in
women’s cricket, Harmanpreet preferred to focus on overall growth.
"Well, nowadays women's cricket is improving day by day. All the
teams, if you see, they are batting really well. They are improving in bowling
also. So I think every team is improving day by day and now it's only about who
is going to play best cricket on that particular day.
Harmanpreet’s century was her seventh in ODIs, and also her first score above fifty in the format in 13 innings. Before this, her best in the two white-ball series in England was 26 in the fourth T20I.
Reaching the 4,000-run milestone in WODIs added another highlight to her
day.
"Yeah, it's always a great moment, adding those runs for your
country. It means a lot to me and I wish to continue more for the
country."
The skipper was also full of praise for young seamer Kranti Goud, who
grabbed 6/52 to restrict England to 305 and became the second-youngest Indian
woman after Deepti Sharma to take a five-wicket haul in ODIs. She gifted her
player of the match award to the young seamer.
"She's been really impressive whenever she was on the field and bowling for the team. Today was also, we went with four spinners but we knew that Kranti is someone who can always give us a breakthrough in the initial moment.
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