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David Warner was out of sight but not out of mind through Sunrisers Hyderabad's journey to the final of last IPL, with the returning Australian saying he was part of their chat group, getting encouraging messages.
Along with fellow Australian teammate Steve Smith, Warner was banned for one year by Cricket Australia for their role in ball-tampering in South Africa last year.
Owing to the ban, both missed the Indian Premier League's last edition, but are now gearing up to compete in the 12th season of the cash-rich event.
"It's very important. It is one tournament on the calendar that I've always been looking forward to. I've had a lot of success over the years from when I first started," Warner was quoted as saying by India Today.
The swashbuckling opener added, "From Delhi, I moved to Hyderabad. This is my second home and to come back here to open arms and to be greeted by the fans, some of the passionate and kind words, it means a lot to my family and myself.
Warner will use the IPL to get some much-needed batting practice and runs and justify his selection in Australia's World Cup squad.
On the eve of the IPL, Warner thanked SRH mentor VVS Laxman for his support.
"With everything going on in last four months, I was at the forefront of his mind, I'm in the Sunrisers family's mind and that they're gonna welcome me with open arms as soon as the IPL starts. I'm really grateful for it and just ready to get back into it," said Warner.
Following the ball-tampering episode, Smith and Warner were banned alongside Cameron Bancroft, while Cricket Australia was subject to a cultural review. But, touched by the warm welcome he received at Sunrisers Hyderabad, Warner is right now solely focussed on the IPL.
As the topic changed to India's recent ODI series loss to Australia, Warner felt Mahendra Singh Dhoni's absence in the final two matches helped Aaron Finch's side.
"We know MS wasn't playing the last couple of games and you know from the Australian point of view, I thought 'that's a big gap, a big hole and we've got a chance’. That's the impact one player like him has from an opposition's point of view. These are the headaches a lot of teams will have when they are selecting their 15," Warner said.
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