London: Indian captain Virat Kohli says opposition hardly matters in the Champions Trophy semifinal and final even though an India-England final is what everybody seems to want.
India will face Bangladesh in the second semifinal Thursday after the first semifinal between England and Pakistan Wednesday.
The Indian cricket captain was joined by some of his teammates, including former captain MS Dhoni, and coach Anil Kumble at a special reception that was hosted by the Indian High Commission to mark the UK-India Year of Culture, at the Lord’s Cricket Ground last evening.
“It would not have mattered who we were playing in the semis. The league phase is the toughest. We have an opportunity to win one game and enter the final. Everyone wants to see an India-England final. If both teams play well, people might get what they want,” he said.
Asked which team he would prefer to come up against in the finals, he added, “Anyone. We would just be happy to be in the final.” Kohli said it was a treat to be welcomed by “massive crowds wherever we play”.
“If there is a sunny day in England, there is no better place to play cricket. The white ball hasn’t historically swung as much here. When the clouds come in, the conditions become a bit more difficult,” he asserted.
“You have to respect the conditions here regardless of what score you are batting at. That is the beautiful thing about playing here, it challenges you as a batsman,” he added.
The reception marked the launch of ‘Cricket Connects’ exhibition, which opens at the Nehru Centre in London and will be touring Edinburgh and Birmingham as a celebration of cricketing ties between India and the UK.
“What better way to connect than cricket. Everyone is hoping for an India-England final at The Oval in this special UK-India Year of Culture. May the better team win,” said Indian high commissioner to the UK, Yashvardhan Kumar Sinha.
The reception was attended by a number of former India and England cricket personalities including Farookh Engineer, Dilip Doshi and former England players Andrew Strauss and Monty Panesar.