'Need to perform when it matters' - David Warner responds to Mohammad Kaif's 'best team on paper' remark
Former Indian cricketer and commentator Mohammad Kaif had said that India, not Australia, were the best team on paper.
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The Australian cricket team emerged victorious in the 2023 World Cup, defeating India by six wickets at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad. However, after the game, former Indian cricketer and commentator Mohammad Kaif expressed his belief that India, not Australia, were the best team on paper.
"I can never expect that the best team has won the World Cup. The Indian Team is the best team on the paper," Kaif told Star Sports after India's loss. His statement prompted Australian broadcaster Glenn Mitchell to respond with a post reminding Kaif that the "World Cup finals are won on the cricket field and not on paper".
"I think someone needs to remind former Indian batter, Mohammad Kaif that World Cup finals are won on a cricket field and not on paper," Mitchell wrote on 'X' (formerly Twitter).
I think someone needs to remind former Indian batter, Mohammad Kaif that World Cup finals are won on a cricket field and not on paper
— Glenn Mitchell (@MitchellGlenn) November 21, 2023
🏏 #ICCCricketWorldCup #INDvAUS pic.twitter.com/l77gmL6xdw
Australia star David Warner joined in the conversation, stating that performance on the day of the final is what matters most.
"I like MK [Mohammad Kaif], issue is it does not matter what’s on paper. At the end of the day you need to perform when it matters. That’s why they call it a final. That’s the day that counts and it can go either way, that’s sports. 2027 here we come," wrote Warner replying to Mitchell's post on X.
I like MK, issue is it does not matter what’s on paper. At the end of the day you need to perform when it matters. That’s why they call it a final. That’s the day that counts and it can go either way, that’s sports. 2027 here we come 👍 https://t.co/DBDOCagG2r
— David Warner (@davidwarner31) November 22, 2023
Following the event's final, Indian captain Rohit Sharma acknowledged that his team fell short by 20-30 runs, which ultimately cost them the match. He emphasized that the partnership between Head and Labuschagne was the turning point of the game.
"We tried everything but it wasn't supposed to be. 20-30 runs more would have been good. credit to Head and Labuschagne who stitched together a big partnership and put us completely out of the game," Rohit stated.
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