On pitches where the ball is expected to swing and bounce, Ishant seeks to improve his tournament record and resurrect a career that is increasingly under threat from younger colleagues.
"The conditions here are just right for me. For both batsmen and bowlers it's going to be a challenge," he said, adding: "It's going to be a mental thing this time. If we can bowl in the right areas, the wickets will come and that's been our focus at the nets," said Ishant.
Ishant is clearly not in top form. He leaked runs -- a record 66 against Chennai Super Kings -- during the Indian Premier League and hardly justified the price Sunrisers Hyderabad paid to buy him. In India's first warm-up game against Sri Lanka in Birmingham on June 1, the lanky pacer conceded 41 runs in his six overs and got the wicket of Mahela Jayawardene. But Ishant doesn't want to read much into all this.
This will be Ishant's second Champions Trophy. He was part of the pace quartet in the 2009 championship in South Africa that included Ashish Nehra, R P Singh and Praveen Kumar.