[caption id="attachment_54988" align="aligncenter" width="580"]Smith Aussie skipper Steve Smith during the press-conference at the Eden Gardens. Image Source: XtraTime[/caption] Internet Desk: Australia skipper Steve Smith blamed the batsmen of his team for "panicking” under pressure and demanded more determination from the batsmen as the visitors collapsed again and lost the match by 50 runs in the second ODI in Kolkata. The hosts posted a respective score of 252 runs on the board to chase at the Eden Gardens and defended it well last night thanks to brilliant a brilliant opening spell by Bhuvneshwar Kumar and hat-trick from left-arm chinaman spinner Kuldeep Yadav. The Men in Blue are leading the five-match ODI series 2-0 and just a win away to seal the series against the Aussies. Clearly fed up, Smith, who scored 59, said his batsmen were making "silly errors" and had to change their approach "It's happening a bit too often for my liking, to be honest with you, in all forms of cricket," Smith told reporters. "We've had a lot of collapses and we need to stop. "The guys have trained really well and it's now about getting out in the middle and executing your skills when you're under pressure and not panicking. "I think we panicked last game a little bit and in this game, we just couldn't get the partnerships. We're making silly errors when we're under pressure." Australia's last five batsmen managed a total of 10 runs between them in Kolkata, while the top order rarely looked comfortable playing the spin of Kuldeep and Yuzvendra Chahal. "It's easy to just sit here and say 'it needs to stop', but when you get out in the middle you have to change what you're doing because it's not working," added Smith, whose 100th ODI was spoilt by the result. "Watching the ball closer or maybe the guys are trying to watch it too closely and forgetting about just playing the game. "It's a hard one to put my finger on. But whatever it is, it needs to change and we need to make better decisions when we're under pressure and start playing the game properly." All-rounder Marcus Stoinis was the only Australian player to score 62 in just 65 deliveries and remained not out at the crease. According to the Aussie skipper he had given his team mates the blueprint for how to handle the conditions and the Indian bowlers. "He didn't panic, he was calm and he played good cricket shots," Smith said. "He was nice and positive with his intent. "We just needed someone else in the top four to go on and make a score."