"I am feeling better now. I am certainly very hopeful of playing tomorrow. I can say I am getting better each day," said Williamson whose viral infection-induced absence weakened the visitors' batting significantly in the second game at Kolkata.
"We should have put up a better performance although we know it's a challenge in India. At the same time we need to play our best cricket. If we can put up our best we can get a result in our favour in this part of the world," said New Zealand's top batsman who made 75 and 25 in the series opener at Kanpur before missing the second game in Kolkata.
"In the last two games we could have pushed that first innings total to nearer 300, the 240- 250 score needed to be 300- 350," he said.
New Zealand made 262 and 236 at Kanpur and followed them with even smaller totals of 204 and 197 at the Eden Gardens.
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"The 300 mark in the first or second innings seems to be pretty effective and batsmen who have got to 80, or about that score, seem to have made significant contributions," he said while reflecting on the small totals scored so far by both the teams.
He conceded that Indian pace bowlers Mohammed Shami and Bhuvneshwar Kumar, who misses the last game due to injury picked up in the Kolkata game, outshone his own pace attack by using the old ball effectively.
"I certainly know both are very good bowlers. In the last game the seam bowlers made a bigger impact. We did not know coming here that reverse swing would be quite effective. They exploited reverse swing better than us.
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