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    Rohit in comfort zone

    The Indian batsman is all set to open the innings with an aim to get quality match practice in the second warm-up match against Bangladesh in the Champions Trophy

    Rohit in comfort zone
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    Rohit Sharma

    London

    Rohit Sharma will be back in his familiar opening position with an aim to get some quality batting practice when India take on Bangladesh in their final warm-up game before the Champions Trophy opener against Pakistan.

    After a convincing 45-run victory against New Zealand in a rain-curtailed opening warm-up match, Virat Kohli will pray that his batsmen get some more game time than the 26 overs they got the other day. 

    For Rohit, it will be back to the opening slot, having batted down the order during the better part of the Indian Premier League. He missed out on the first game as personal commitments led to him joining the squad on Saturday evening. 

    It will be like a completion of cycle for Rohit, whose limited overs career was transformed by Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s inspired decision to promote him up the order during India’s successful Champions Trophy campaign in 2013. 

    One of the biggest reasons for India’s success was the Rohit-Shikhar Dhawan duo, which is again back to face the new ball in conditions, which will be familiar to the one they encountered four years back. With Ajinkya Rahane failing as an opener in the first warm-up game, even the remotest thoughts of a change at the top will not be entertained by the team management.

    Kohli, after a well-compiled half-century in the first game, would prefer another good hit out there in the middle along with Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who looked impressive during his brief stint. 

    It is still not clear if Yuvraj Singh, recovering from viral fever will be available. The veteran also needs some practice ahead of the Pakistan game. The skipper would also like to give Kedar Jadhav a chance to get a decent hit out there in the middle. Bangladesh has been a very decent side in 50-overs cricket. A testimony to that was their quarter-final finish during the 2015 World Cup. 

    The pace quartet of Mustafizur Rahaman, Rubel Hossain, Taskin Ahmed and skipper Mashrafe Mortaza can prove to be more than a handful for any opposition on a given day. In fact, India lost an ODI away series against Bangladesh back in 2015 when Mustafizur was relatively new to international cricket. Facing them in real match time will mean good preparation ahead of the marquee clash against Pakistan, next Sunday.

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