Ahmedabad: Australia defeated India by six wickets to win their sixth ODI World Cup at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Sunday. India were red-hot favourites to win the tournament after 10 successive victories but Australia were the much better side in the final thanks mainly to a Travis Head hundred.
There were tears flowing down Mohammed Siraj’s cheek, KL Rahul on his haunches. Captain Rohit Sharma tried his best to hide his tears while walking off the field but his eyes gave in. Virat Kohli took the help of his cap. He was not going to let the world see.
Speaking to the media after the six-wicket loss in the final, India head coach Rahul Dravid admitted that the dressing room was an emotional wreck given the months of hard work they have put forth to get to this position of standing so close to breaking the nation’s 10-year drought of an ICC trophy.
“Yeah, of course, he’s (Rohit Sharma) disappointed, as are many boys in the dressing room. It wasn’t, yeah, there were a lot of emotions in that dressing room. It was tough to see as a coach, because I know how hard these guys have worked, what they’ve put in, the sacrifices they’ve made. So, it’s tough. I mean, it’s tough to see that as a coach, because you get to know these boys personally. You get to see the effort they put in, the hard work that we’ve put in over the last month, the kind of cricket we’ve played. But yeah, but that’s sport. That happens. It can happen. And the better team won on the day. And I’m sure that the sun will come up tomorrow morning. We’ll learn from it. We’ll reflect. And we’ll move on, as will everyone else. I mean, that’s what you do as sportsmen. You have some great highs in sport, and you have some lows in sport. And you keep moving on. You don’t stop. Because if you don’t put yourself on the line, you don’t put yourself in games like these, you don’t experience the great highs. And neither do you experience the great lows. And if you don’t do that, you don’t learn.”
Having learnt through his days as a captain in the forgettable 2007 World Cup, Dravid reckoned that the team will bounce back from their loss and move on to achieve bigger things.
“That’s sport, it happens. It can happen and the better team won on the day. And I’m sure the sun will come up tomorrow morning. We’ll learn from it, we’ll reflect. And we’ll move on. As will everyone else. That’s what we do as sportsmen. You have some great highs and lows in sports but you don’t stop because if you don’t put yourself on the line, don’t put yourself in situations like these, you don’t experience it, you don’t learn,” he said.