Dubai Timesofindia.com: Dubai International Cricket Stadium had a pindrop silence when ground staff were busy preparing for their final moments at the performance square. The stands were as abandoned as the road leading to the venue, and continued to be talked about during the Dubai leg of the Champions Trophy. However, the multinational tournament between India and Pakistan will be taking the field to what it promises to be an action-packed Sunday.
The only shade of blue is in the middle, as a capacity crowd ensures that seats of similar colours remain occupied. It is a recent activity in Dubai Group that has sold out and resold, with buyers ready to sell four times the face value. After all, it’s India vs Pakistan, and even if the competition wasn’t the previous one, the pressure remains as high as ever. The blue men have the advantage in this format as their final defeat to Pakistan came to the 2017 Champions Trophy Finals. Since then, they have won five out of six games, with the exception being the Washout Group Games in the Asian Cup.
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In terms of skills, rivalries are leaning heavily against India, but the pressure can do interesting things and continues to make this fixture the most popular asset in cricket. And that was repeated many times when India’s vice captain Shubman Gill and Pakistan’s head coach Aqib Jabd spoke to the media.
Batt and Gill, who have yet to make a significant contribution to Pakistan, feels that the team that handles the pressure will win, but they claimed that they are treating this as just another fixture. It’s not the first time I’ve heard such a statement from the corner of India, but Gill’s relaxed body language downplayed the hype. When asked if this was the “bigest match”, the youngsters chose to object.
“First of all, I think it’s a big game, but I think the biggest game is clearly the final one where the team plays. I’ve never played it recently, but I think it’s definitely going to make them a lesser side. Masu.
In the opposite corner, manager Aaqib Javed, who has been featured in a considerable number of games in India and Pakistan, said pressure will become a rivalry. The former crew strongly believes that both pressure and passion can bring out the best from the player.
“Now, we’re all guessing what’s going to happen in this match. This is the beauty, what’s going to happen. No one knows anything. So, in the same way, pressure. It’s the player’s job to put in. Pressure, what remains in the Pakistan and Indian games?
The heat is in Pakistan, and the predicted stick was raised by the country’s Prime Minister Shebaz Sharif when he said that the team’s real mission is not only to win the Champions Trophy, but to beat India . The first part of “The Real Task” didn’t get an ideal start as the host lost the opening game to New Zealand. If they fail to complete the second part of the task, they defeated India – the host could leave the tournament in just 5 days!
But pressure can do interesting things, and both sides know it well. As the coin rises to carry over toss and deafening cheers, the contest is certainly determined by how high pressure situations are dealt with.