Cramped calendar hampers mental preparation, says Dhoni

BANGALORE, (Reuters) – India’s jam-packed itinerary  has not only taken a physical toll on the players but could also  affect their mindset heading into the World Cup, captain  Mahendra Singh Dhoni said.
Boasting some of the hottest young talent in the game,  co-hosts India are one of the favourites to lift the World Cup  which begins on Saturday.
But Dhoni warned that the team’s mental preparation had been  hit by the rigors of constantly switching between tests, one-day  internationals and Twenty20 matches in the run-up to the World  Cup.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni
Mahendra Singh Dhoni

“The mindset was not really there. Mentally we were not  ready, that’s one of the reasons why we couldn’t bat well,”  Dhoni told reporters after India defeated World Cup holders  Australia by 38 runs in a warm-up match in Bangalore on Sunday.
“Of course for the warm-up game mentally it was very  difficulty to prepare yourself.
“If you play 35 odd ODIs in a year and 10 test matches and  45 days of IPL and Champions League, then all of a sudden you  hear there’s a warm-up game, it’s a very difficult scenario to  mentally prepare yourself for the game which really reflected on  the field.”
India’s much-hyped middle order, which included big hitters  Yuvraj Singh and Dhoni, failed to get going on Sunday and the  only meaningful contributions were a half-century from opener  Virender Sehwag and an uncharacteristically slow 32 from Yusuf  Pathan.
Only a special effort from the spinners and an Australian  batting collapse turned the game in India’s favour.
In the absence of Sachin Tendulkar, who was rested due to a  hamstring niggle, the procession of India’s specialist batsmen  came and went without troubling the scorers too much.
This is proving to be a cause for concern.

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Although the likes of Pathan, Gautam Gambhir, Virat Kohli  and Suresh Raina are vastly experienced in ODIs, they are all  making their World Cup debuts — a tournament that is gruelling  enough mentally without the added pressure of playing at home.
With the old rearguards such as Rahul Dravid and Saurav  Ganguly gone, Dhoni will be looking to Sehwag and Yuvraj to draw  on their experience in guiding the new crop of players through  the tournament.
“You know the kind of talent we have got, we just need to  get off to a good start and the middle order needs to  contribute,” said Dhoni.
Dhoni himself is a key player and will look to draw on his  own experience of the 2007 World Cup, where India were  eliminated in the group stages.
“I am talking about my experience to mentally play in a game  like this especially after what we saw in the 2007 World Cup.  The first two games were really good for us. After that I don’t  know where we lost,” he added referring to India’s unexpected  defeat by Bangladesh.
With the Indian team boasting the sport’s most prolific run  scorer in Tendulkar, the joint second-ranked ODI batsman in the  world in Kohli and an explosive hitter of the ball in Sehwag,  besides others, it is a safe assumption that over the next seven  weeks, all eyes will be on India’s batting.
India play their final warm-up match against New Zealand on  Wednesday, and then take on co-hosts Bangladesh in the opening  match of the tournament in Dhaka on Feb. 19.