"Ever since the Asian Games Gold in 2014, the team has started to believe in itself again. We never wanted to come down from that stage and only wanted to climb up. We had a ranking of 12-13 before 2014 but recently we were placed No.6 and currently we are ranked No.7 in the world," Raghunath said in the lead up to the Champions Trophy in London.
He is one of the senior most players in the team, but Raghunath said one can't get complacent.
"Nobody can take their place in the Indian team for granted, you have to constantly prove yourself. Anyone who performs well will be in the squad and personally for me, I would like to test myself against big teams like Australia, Germany and Netherlands in the upcoming tournaments and analyse my performance," he said.
Commenting on the ongoing preparations for Rio Olympics at SAI centre here, Raghunath said: "I feel we are best prepared than ever before for a big tournament, be it physically, mentally or even psychologically. We are not only focus on improving individually but also encourage each other and tell ourselves that we need to perform as a unit to leave a mark at the Olympics this time.