India will face New Zealand yet again for the ICC Champions Trophy final, and before the endgame kicks in, Indian batters were spotted undergoing spin treatment in the nets of the ICC Academy on Friday. New Zealand, one of the most compact teams in the tournament, has a sound spin department. Despite a 40-run defeat against India, the spinners did enough to torment the batters. In the last game, New Zealand captain Mitchell Santner delivered a disciplined bowling performance, finishing with figures of 10-1-41-1. However, Michael Bracewell proved to be slightly expensive, conceding 56 runs in his nine-over spell without taking a wicket. So far, the Kiwi spin duo has collectively claimed 13 wickets across four matches. Additionally, Rachin Ravindra made a notable impact with his left-arm spin, picking up a wicket while giving away 31 runs in his six-over spell. On Friday, the Indian batters were seen playing against Varun Chakravarthy, Kuldeep Yadav, Axar Patel, and Ravindra Jadeja for longer spells. Not only that, but after tackling the spin quartet, the batters faced the local spinners as well. Read also: Jasprit Bumrah to Miss First Two Weeks of IPL 2025: Reports Sitangshu Kotak speaks on batters' adaptibility The Dubai International Cricket Stadium predominantly supports spin and is likely to provide some grip for the spinners. Speaking about the track, India's batting coach Sitangshu Kotak said that slow bowlers might get some more help from it, and patience is the ideal way for battlers to tackle spin, as seen in previous matches. He said, "Wickets change a bit obviously, but here it has not changed the tendency much. Our batting has been really good. Secondly, in four matches, batting first or second we got runs from openers, and when they didn't, the middle-order gave some runs. Till now, there was not much need for power hitting and in the last match it also happened." Kotak, however, clarified that batters can adjust on the pitch and can deliver big if the score touches or crosses beyond 350. He added, "Our batters can adjust on any surface. So that is the key. I think we can adjust to the wicket and obviously, if it is a 350 runs kind of wicket, we might go a little hard, obviously, as there will be pace on the wicket and ball comes on. But on this kind of a wicket (at the DICS), you try and rotate the strike, and you try to take the game deep and then, try to finish the game if you are chasing or try and set the biggest possible target. I think we have done that pretty well." India will play their final game in Dubai on March 9 Sunday against New Zealand.