India have picked Mayank Agarwal as replacement for the injured Vijay Shankar in their 2019 Cricket World Cup squad. Virat Kohli's team lost their second first-choice batsman of the World Cup, with Shankar ruled out on the eve of their penultimate group game against Bangladesh. The batting all-rounder joined opener Shikhar Dhawan in losing his place in the squad, having been unable to recover sufficiently from a toe injury. He was struck on the left foot by teammate Jasprit Bumrah in the nets and despite playing the next two games, against Afghanistan and the West Indies, scans have showed a fracture that requires three weeks to heal. Test batsman Agarwal, who has yet to play a one-day international, has been approved as his replacement but Rishabh Pant, who stood in at No 4 in <a href="https://www.thenational.ae/sport/cricket/cricket-world-cup-2019-england-were-pretty-good-with-bat-ball-and-in-the-field-to-defeat-india-and-keep-semi-final-hopes-alive-1.881135">Sunday's defeat to England</a>, can expect to continue at Edgbaston. But if Agarwal does get a game at any point during the remainder of the tournament, he will be the seventh Indian player to make his ODI debut in the game's showpiece event. The six players to have achieved this possibly nerve-wracking feat include Anshuman Gaekwad, Karsan Ghavri and Mohinder Amarnath (at the 1975 World Cup), Surinder Khanna (1979), Navjot Singh Sidhu (1987) and Ajay Jadeja (1992). India need to win one of their two remaining games to be certain of a semi-final place, easing up the expectation on their revamped top order. Rohit Sharma has led the way so far, scoring three centuries in six innings and the opener insisted he, rather than the likes of Pant, would be shouldering the burden. "We know what he can do with the bat. He just needs confidence," Rohit said of his young teammate. "Expecting a lot is not right at the moment from him, but he should just come and play and enjoy his cricket. "It is my duty, actually. Every game for me is a new game, and I try and do the same, try and see if I can finish the game, or bat as long as possible and get the team in good position. "Yes, the majority of the runs have been scored by the top three, but that's why we are here, to score runs, and we'll keep doing that as long as we are playing." Bangladesh head into their final group game knowing an upset victory is their only hope of staying alive in the competition. Even then other results would hold the key but all the Tigers can do is seek revenge for heavy defeats to India in the last two World Cups, then cross their fingers. "Every time we play we want to win but India have mostly, in the last few World Cups, been the better side," captain Mashrafe Mortaza said. "If you have a very good day, play good in every area, and if we are at 100 per cent, then you never know. On your day you can beat anybody. "I don't think it's psychological, it's all about skill. It depends man to man, who will take pressure."