India’s premier spinning all-rounder R Ashwin may be going through a rough patch currently but he contributed with the bat in Auckland and the Indian allrounder says he is very happy with his game right now and is in best frame of mind ahead of the fourth ODI against New Zealand tomorrow at Hamilton.

Ashwin’s maiden ODI half-century, which came while batting at number seven, helped India to a dramatictie at Eden Park in the third ODI to stay alive in the five-match series.

“It was a good opportunity presented to me in terms of batting higher up the order. You do not often get so many overs to bat in the current Indian line-up. They always do the job of getting the runs. I got enough overs that day and I thought to just bat the way I bat in a Test match and look for runs all the time. It helped me out in the end,” said Ashwin in a pre-match press conference.

 “This is probably the best frame of mind I have been in,” he countered, when asked about his lack of wickets in recent times.

“I have locked away a few things. I am not reading articles or listening to what people are saying about me. It doesn’t make sense. I had a tour of South Africa which was quite a learning curve for me. I have decided if I am giving my best that is all I can do. I just locked myself out. I spoke to Mahendra Singh Dhoni about a couple of things, to the coach and had chats with a few people I trust. I thought things were going alright. It can happen, you cannot keep taking wickets or making runs all the time. The frame of mind I was in helped me perform the way I did,” Ashwin continued.

Ashwin who took his first of the series whne he bowled Corey Anderson in that third ODI in Auckland, and after 78.3 lean overs across all formats of international cricket. His last wicket prior to this had come in the Durban ODI against South Africa, wherein he had dismissed Quinton de Kock.

“I am satisfied with how I am bowling. I have sorted out what length and what kind of bowling needs to be done. There are certain ways you need to construct a spell abroad away from India. I have learnt that and put that into practice,” said Ashwin when asked about how he would rectify his poor form with the ball.

“You definitely tend to be targeted as a spinner away from home,” Ashwin said about his role in the Indian bowling set-up. “With the five-fielder (in the circle) rule you can only look to give a single. You cannot err on both lengths. The batsman knows if you have your sweeper up, you are not going to err on the shorter side so you are giving away some clues to the batsman in terms of what field you are setting, and you cannot be fulllish enough to try and fool the batsman. They are going to look for boundaries. You have to be really smart and try and make sure you do what the team requires.”

Focus now shifts to the penultimate match of the series wherein India will be keen to win their first game of the tour. “There was a bit of rain around here for the second ODI. The ball was sticking around more than other places. By far Auckland has been the best batting wicket, along with Napier. Hamilton was a little bit slow, but we do not expect it to be slow this time,” Ashwin said, of his team’s expectations for the upcoming ODI. “We have just not been at the best of our games, yet they have all been very close. In Hamilton we were struggling, we were up against it, the D/L method did not help us but we still managed to pull off a game that was quite close.

“We have been fighting hard till the end and things have not gone our way. That is the best point we can take forward from this in terms of saying we have not struck our best game yet,” he signed off.

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