Stunned Ponting misses Warne, McGrath
Ponting said some of his side were suffering from inexperience but had complete confidence in their ability to bounce back for the next Test.
“I have total confidence in my group. With the experience and talent that we have, I am sure we can turn things around pretty quickly,” he said at a post-match press conference.
“Ideally of course I would have liked to have an attack with the McGraths and Warnes. But we’ve got what we’ve got. There is a bit of inexperience, we don’t have a match-winning spinner,” he said.
“But I am not worried about the inexperience. The spinners we have did their job reasonably well.”
Ponting however conceded that Australia were neither good enough in the field nor at the crease and were outplayed by India.
“We weren’t good enough in any aspect of this game, be it fast bowling, spin bowling, batting and, at times, our fielding was a bit sloppy, so we’ve been outplayed,” he said.
“Sometimes as a captain and player you have to accept that and say they were better than us this week. We were better than them last week, but that’s irrelevant now and they’re 1-0 up going into the next Test.
For Australia, which won the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in India in 2004-05 after a gap of 34 years under Adam Gilchrist’s captaincy, it was the biggest defeat against India since 1977 in Melbourne.
“India have had a great game here,” he said.
“It is up to us now to regroup and bounce back. That’s a challenge because we are not accustomed to being behind in a Test series.
“It’s a bit of a mindset thing. We have to learn our lessons from this game and then clear our minds before we head into the third Test. We just need to fine tune our game,” he added.—AFP