NEW DELHI, Sept 12: India batsman Virender Sehwag played down on Friday the prospects of further bad blood in the forthcoming series against Australia after a racism row marred the previous meeting between the two sides.

“Whatever happened last time ended there,” Sehwag said.

“We will try to play tough cricket not through words but with the ball.”

India threatened to pull out of the series in January after spinner Harbhajan Singh was initially found guilty of racially abusing all-rounder Andrew Symonds in the acrimonious second Test in Sydney.

A standoff between the teams was ended after the charge was downgraded on appeal to using abusive language and the bowler let off with a fine. Australia won the series 2-1.

The issue was revived after Symonds was omitted from the touring squad named on Friday for disciplinary reasons after missing a compulsory team meeting to go fishing.

“We are happy he is not coming because he can change the course of a match any time,” Sehwag said. “He bats at number five and can bowl too, so it will be to our advantage.

“He is a very good player and you need such players to lift the competition. It is a loss for cricket, but we’re happy.”

The 29-year-old batsman said he was looking forward to facing Australia again after recovering from an ankle injury.

“It is a challenge playing Australia,” he said. “Their bowling attack is so good if you score runs against them it gives you confidence playing against other sides.”

Sehwag has been in fine form since he was recalled to the Test team on the Australia tour, ending a year-long absence due to poor batting form.

He stroked 151 in the drawn final Test in Adelaide after he was picked for the third Test win in Perth and scored 319 in the following Test in the home series against South Africa.

He also hit a match-winning 201 not out in the 2-1 series loss in Sri Lanka in July-August, aggregating 1,002 runs at an average of over 70 from 14 innings since his return.

The first Test match starts in the city of Bangalore on Oct 9.

—Reuters

Opinion

Editorial

Region on edge
Updated 27 Oct, 2024

Region on edge

If the global community is serious about de-escalation in the region, it must call for an immediate, unconditional ceasefire in Gaza.
Series win, at last
27 Oct, 2024

Series win, at last

NOMAN Ali and Sajid Khan walked off after England’s second innings, jointly holding the ball having all but ...
Crimes of collusion
27 Oct, 2024

Crimes of collusion

MULTIPLE socioeconomic factors propel criminal practices. Preying on the poor for astronomical profit tops the list....
Selling PIA
Updated 26 Oct, 2024

Selling PIA

Aurangzeb’s assertion that govt hopes to finalise the privatisation next month indicates issues with shortlisted bidders will be resolved soon.
Anti-Muslim bias
26 Oct, 2024

Anti-Muslim bias

RECENT findings of the EU’s human rights agency point to a troubling rise in bias against the bloc’s 26m ...
On the pulse
26 Oct, 2024

On the pulse

HEART disease is fast becoming an epidemic in Pakistan, increasingly affecting younger populations. Karachi, for...