New Delhi: Harbhajan Singh who scaled many historic heights as part of Ganguly-led Indian team in the 2000s, came out with the lowest point of his international cricketing career. The veteran off spinner on Sunday said that ICC 2007 50-over World Cup has been the lowest nadir of his career as the 'Men In Blue' faced a shocking exit from the multi-nation tournament after suffering upset defeats to minnows Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Harbhajan hit out hard against former Indian coach Greg Chappell for dividing the team and added that to date, no one knows what was the real intentions behind Chappell's motive in trying create a rift between the players and bring about a very inharmonious environment in the dressing room. The spinner was having an interaction with former India batsman Aakash Chopra and it was then that the 'Turbanator' talked about the lowest point of his career. "When Greg Chappell came as the coach of our side, he disrupted the entire team, no one knows what was his motive when he came to coach us, no one knows how to disrupt a solid team better than him, he used to do whatever he wanted," Harbhajan said on the official YouTube channel of Aakash Chopra. "2007 50-over World Cup has to be the lowest point of my career, I thought we are going through such a difficult time and I also thought that maybe it is not right time to play for India, wrong people were at the helm of Indian cricket, Greg Chappell was trying to divide and lead, he used to do such things," he added. Harbhajan also said that the 2007 World Cup side was a solid team, but they failed to progress ahead as the mood in the camp was not right. "We had a solid team for the 2007 50-over World Cup, we were just not able to perform as no one was in the right frame of mind, no one trusted each other, when the team is not happy then the results do not go your way. We lost to Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, they were not that big teams, it was not like we lost to Australia," Harbhajan said.