Pacer Umesh Yadav on Friday conceded that the Indian bowlers have gone awry with their plans, sending down too many short balls that allowed the Australian tail-enders to stage a comeback and pile up an imposing 505 in the second Test.
The hosts had been reduced to 247 for six before they recovered to reach 505, taking a 97-run first innings lead over India.
“In the morning session, we were in a good position. But after that we started leaking runs. Mitchell Johnson and Mitchell Starc got runs and they had a good partnership with Steve Smith. I feel we conceded 50 runs more than we should have,” Yadav told reporters at the end of third day’s play.
“In the morning session, the ball had gone soft and we thought we will stick to line and length. We did that and got two wickets too. But when the tail-enders came, we thought we will bowl bouncers because of some difficulty they had against the bouncers.
“On Australian wickets if there is bounce then fast bowlers tend to bowl short balls and bouncers. We just did that. There is no point saying we bowled too many short balls.
At one stage, it was too much you can say. But that was our plan and we worked on that,” he explained.
Both Johnson (88) and Starc (52) hit fifties as they helped Smith put on important partnerships after Brad Haddin got out.
“Sometimes you get a little bit aggressive. Sometimes it can be right and sometimes it can be wrong. Sometimes batsmen score runs in that aggressive phase and sometimes it can be effective and you end up picking wickets.
“It normally happens when a new batsman comes in and we try to make him uncomfortable. Obviously, they tried to hit back and connected a few, so it evened out,” said Yadav.