Rohit Sharma is confident India have learned from their dismal T20 World Cup campaign last year and will be more prepared for archrivals Pakistan in a blockbuster Group 2 opener Sunday.
The India captain said a key lesson from the 2021 tournament, which ended for his squad with a 10-wicket thrashing from Pakistan, was more emphasis on fine-tuning ahead of time.
So, the India squad arrived in Australia more than two weeks ago, initially training in Perth in Western Australia before crossing the continent for a warm-up game against defending champions and tournament hosts Australia in Brisbane.
Taking six wickets in the last two overs to edge Australia by six runs in the unofficial match at the Gabba, which followed recent series wins over South Africa and Australia in the shortest format of the international game, has boosted India's confidence as they seek to end a 15-year T20 title drought.
Rohit said the opportunity to play in different conditions in Western Australia and Queensland was important as it allowed those in the 15-man squad who had not played Down Under a chance to experience the variance in pitches and grounds.
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"We wanted to change a lot of things that went wrong for us in the last World Cup. We managed to get some of those things right, for sure," he said. "We are pretty much starting in a good position right now, understanding what we need to do as a team."
Rohit said the bowling group and the batting group were clear on their strategies and needed to be backed up in the field.
"It is now time to execute those plans, those ideas," he said. "No team will be 100 percent right but we want to do as many things as possible right."
He conceded that the challenge posed by Pakistan, who were training at the MCG Saturday night, was significant given their recent matches.
The 10-wicket win at Dubai in the 2021 T20 World Cup aside, Pakistan responded from a loss to India in the group stages of the recent Asia Cup to post a five-wicket victory last month.
T20's top-ranked batter Mohammad Rizwan proved to be the match-winner for Pakistan in that encounter, just as he did in their last World Cup meeting when scoring an unbeaten 79 runs.
But Sharma said India had identified the strengths and weaknesses of the 2009 T20 World Cup champions.
"I don't want to use the word pressure, because pressure is constant. It doesn't change, ever," he said. "I would like to see this as a challenge. This Pakistan team is very challenging. All the Pakistan teams I have played against since 2007 till 2022 have been good."
The biggest threat to India's hopes of beginning the World Cup with a victory might not be Rizwan. Nor will the presence of Virat Kohli batting at No.3 be the biggest concern for Pakistan – should Melbourne's notoriously fickle weather continue.