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Ambati Rayudu's batting at number four and young Khaleel Ahmed's emergence as the third seamer were the two biggest gains from the ODI series against the West Indies, believe India skipper Virat Kohli and head coach Ravi Shastri.
Skipper Kohli too praised his bowlers for their clinical show in the last two games.
"Because of our clinical performance, we were able to finish the game in a few hours. Credit to the bowling unit for pitching it in the right areas. Was surprised that West Indies chose to bat, we wanted to bowl first anyway," added Kohli.
Shastri on his part also seemed happy with the kind of pressure Rayudu absorbed, having made a comeback in the Indian team.
Shastri seemed impressed with left-arm seamer Khaleel but wants him to add a few more clicks.
Shastri said the team is back on track after its sixth successive ODI series win at home.
"We are back on track. I thought we were below par in the field in the second and third ODI. Sometimes you need a wake-up call and we were at our best in the last two ODIs. This Windies team is a promising unit. They have some exceptional players who with exposure, I am sure will test some of the big sides," the coach felt.
West Indies captain Jason Holder rued the lack of consistency from his team.
Thought it would've been a good pitch. Their bowlers put the ball in the right areas but lot of our dismissals were poor shots, it wasn't about the pitch. We needed to show more application."
Shimron Hetmyer and Shai Hope were the two bright spots for the West Indies in the series.
"Even Oshane Thomas here, he showed he's got something. Just needs to work a little harder," added Holder.
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