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India's Rohit denies 'mental scars' from big Adelaide defeat

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AFP
India's captain Rohit Sharma denied their heavy defeat in Adelaide left any mental scars, AFP
Skipper Rohit Sharma vowed that India will rebound against Australia in Brisbane and refuses to believe their heavy defeat in the second Test on Sunday will leave a mental "scar".

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The hosts won the day-nighter in Adelaide by 10 wickets to level the series 1-1 and with less than a week before they meet again at the Gabba, India are racing against the clock to fix what went wrong.


Rohit attributed the demoralising loss to sub-standard batting, but brushed off the scale of the defeat.


"Firstly, it's not a (mental) scar, it's just we've lost a Test match," he said.


"We didn't play well enough. So it's important in this short time that we have before the next Test match just to figure out certain things.


"You know, if you want to bat how we want to bat, and if you want to bowl, what lines and what lengths and what kind of fields placement we need to have.


"Those are the things more than anything else. Like I said, it's still one-all and plenty of things left in this series and definitely a way for us to get back into it."


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India were dismissed for just 180 in the first innings after winning the toss and opting to bat at the Adelaide Oval, then were skittled for 175 in their second knock.


It left Australia needing just 19 runs to win, which they completed inside the first session on day three.


"When you come to Australia I feel the best chance of winning a Test match is by putting runs on the board. And of course, when we won the toss, we elected to bat," said Rohit. 


"We knew that there would be challenges. But in the past, where the conditions have been a little challenging, we've batted really well to put runs on the board and then try and put pressure on the opposition. 


"That is the disappointing part, that we didn't bat well enough, you know, probably were 30-40 runs short with the bat in the first innings."


India also failed to make best use of the new pink ball when Australia had to negotiate almost two hours at dusk on day one. 


While Jasprit Bumrah was ever-dangerous, the rest of the attack lacked bite.


"There were opportunities when Australia were batting and we failed to take those chances," said Rohit.


"And obviously, when you miss those chances, it is never easy, the opposition will always make you pay for it, and that's what happened."



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