India had Australia down at 21 for two but George Bailey and Steve Smith added 242 runs for the third wicket en route a comfortable win for the hosts.
"There were a lot of positives to be taken from that game especially scoring 300 runs in Perth. Losing is not a positive but we did whatever we could. And also the fact that Australia batted very well," Rohit said ahead of the second ODI at Gabba tomorrow.
"If wickets fall in the middle, then it affects the momentum of the opposition team. That is what we need to do this game because we batted well. We bowled well with new ball but were halted in the middle overs because we didn't take wickets then. And that's what we have to learn," Rohit added.
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Even then, Rohit wouldn't confirm if the Indian team was contemplating playing four fast bowlers, considering that Ishant Sharma is now fully fit and available.
"There are discussions going on (about picking four fast bowlers) but we all have to wait and see what MS (Dhoni) thinks and what he feels is the right combination to go forward with. Here in Brisbane, it will be very similar to what we got in Perth.
"I guess there will be a little more bounce. And Perth was on the slower side a little bit, once the shine was taken off the ball. I think here it will be a little more and the fast bowlers will have a little more assistance through a longer period," he said.
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"So that's how I have looked at it and it is a good opportunity to get past the hundred. You challenge yourself and ask what else you can do after that. So after getting a hundred, I start another innings, which starts from zero, and scoring another hundred and that's how I look at it. As a batting group, our aim has always been one batsman batting through as long as possible," he added.
"When you bat first you actually don't know what is a defendable score. You get 340 and again it is not a safe score anymore. When we were batting in the middle the idea was to capitalize and bat as long as possible, considering we have got a couple of newcomers in the middle order.
"The top three batsmen - myself, Virat (Kohli) and Shikhar Dhawan - for us, it is a big responsibility to bat as long as possible. When we bat we know that we are not too worried about the strike rate we always know that we could cover in the end and in the last 10 overs we scored about 90-95 runs.
When asked if batting second is an advantage thus, the Mumbai batsman replied,"No, I don't think so. You don't get dew factor here. The team that plays better cricket will win the game, and it's as simple as that.
"There is no advantage of batting first or batting second. They batted really well they created big partnership and failed to get break through in the middle. We know where we went wrong and I'm sure we will come back knowing what we can do as a group and put a foot forward."
"About playing with the pink ball, I don't agree that white ball does not do anything. If you play in tough conditions, it is a nightmare for the batsmen. When you play with two new balls when the conditions are against batsmen and when it is overcast the ball tends to swing a lot and there is seam movement as well.
"So that's how I look at it and that is my personal opinion on that," Rohit signed off.