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'We never really got into a great rhythm' - Gilchrist

Adam Gilchrist admitted Australia never managed to hit the stride in the ICC World Twenty20



Adam Gilchrist: "Yuvraj is in a great mindset. He's confident, he's seeing the ball well, he's just trusting himself. Crowds love [cricketers who] play without fear" © AFP

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Adam Gilchrist, Australia's stand-in captain in the last two games, admitted the team never managed to hit the stride after a long lay-off since the World Cup win in the West Indies.

"A bit stuttery for us, wasn't it? A bad start and then a win and a loss and a win ... We never really got into a great rhythm," Gilchrist said after the semi-final loss to India at Kingsmead. "Probably to be expected from the break we had - and the lack of preparation. But by the time tonight came around, we'd played enough to be ready."

Gilchrist singled out Sreesanth's dismissal of Matthew Hayden as the turning-point of the semi-final at Kingsmead. "I felt Sreesanth was the difference in that game. I felt like we were in control, particularly with Matty [Hayden] and Symmo [Andrew Symonds] there, but then that big over. Getting Matty out just turned things their way."

Unsurprisingly, he also praised the form of one particular Indian batsman: "Yuvraj is in a great mindset. He's confident, he's seeing the ball well, he's just trusting himself. Crowds love [cricketers who] play without fear."

And there was admiration, too, for his opposite number as captain. "I thought [Mahendra Singh] Dhoni captained beautifully tonight. He just chose the right times to bowl those bowlers in the last three or four overs."

But when encouraged to pick a winner of Monday's final in Johannesburg, Gilchrist refused to be drawn. "Both teams are playing with a high level of skill. The Indian batting is so dangerous - and Pakistan are bowling beautifully ... so I can't pick a winner because it's that type of game. A little bit of luck does help teams get over the line in the big game. I'm sitting right on the fence."

There was a moment's hesitation when he was asked if he thought Twenty20 was cricket dumbing down. "I've been wrestling back and forwards with it ... I do think it's going to improve one-day cricket. I'm not sure it'll do much for Test cricket, but Test cricket's still a pretty good product." But, warming to his subject, he declared, "I think it's very much a positive for the game."

However, he did call the worth of individual, non-tournament Twenty20 games in to question. "It'll be interesting to see the one-off Twenty20 games now, what rides on those if there's nothing really up for grabs."

SreesanthYuvraj SinghAdam GilchristIndiaAustraliaIndia vs AustraliaICC World Twenty20

Hugh Chevallier is deputy editor of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack