A year and quarter ago India was in England struggling to
put up a fight or in precise terms struggling to find a way to dismiss the
English team twice. The bowling attack had 3 medium pacers and an out of form
Harbhajan, further weakening India’s weak link. Many remember Indian tours correlated
to the way the batting fares and hence the Pataudi trophy of 2011 is vividly
recalled as a tour which had Indian batsmen struggling on green tops!
As a follower you would like to believe that team
managements rate the performance of the team on the scale of the results and
not merely parallel to the views and thoughts that are generated by public
debates/discussions. We always have a hazy belief that captains utilize home
advantage by preparing tracks to the strength of their bowling attacks. Thus when
England arrived in India, the grass on the tracks was expected to be invisible,
the surface soil expected to not stick together and hordes of cracks anticipated to
open up. So far whatever we have witnessed isn’t surprising or unexpected, but
what is, is the way Dhoni has gone vociferously public with his desire of
having rank turners for the visitors! In process he has overturned our belief
that the team perceives poor results = lack of performances, but rather poor
results = unfriendly conditions; and has confirmed our notion that home
skippers ‘do’ have a decisive say in the way the tracks are cooked!
There are two issues here and both demand a separate
discussion - to what extent should the team management have a say in preparing
wickets and what is the borderline between a disgraceful deck and ‘home favored’
one. Curators across traditional cricket centers take pride in preparing
surfaces. Yet when the home team sends a diktat, these meticulous supervisors
are forced to budge. The essence of test cricket is to test players in
different conditions and on different surfaces. It is fair enough if the team has
a preference for a particular kind of track, but demanding them is taking it
too far.
The media in general has a tendency to amalgamate the two
issues mentioned above; for example in the case of the current test between
India and England. Let us try and scan them separately. Dhoni may be on the
wrong side for asking tracks to be prepared to his liking, but is having a turning
track a disgrace for the game? The cliché used with sporting tracks is that it
can offer something for the fast bowlers, spinners and obviously for the
batsmen. Tracks which have movement, bounce and carry are often related to the
test for the batsman’s ability to tackle movement and pace. Fair enough, but
does that imply turning tracks don’t test a batsman’s abilities?
Scuffed up, spin friendly, loosely bound tracks offer a
different kind of variety to test cricket. A spinner opening the bowling is a
strong put-off for many purists and followers, but doesn’t that provide a
dimension to bowling and a test for the opening batsmen’s ability to play spin?
Rough wickets are ideal for reverse swing; isn’t that a rosy proposition for
the medium pacers? 4 slips, 2 gullies is an enticing sight to watch; so are
short leg, silly point & men round the bat! A sub-continental deck force
captains to break the tradition of fast bowling followed spinners, but is that
trend bad for the game?
There are reasons for tracks in this region (in general) being
completely dissimilar to the ones in England/Australia/South Africa in terms of
hardness, crack breaking probability, grass sustenance longevity or their outlook
but doesn’t that command words like ‘diversity’, ‘variety’ rather than ‘non-sporting’,
‘disgraceful’? This piece, not for a moment tries to suggest that preparing
dust-bowls is the way to go, but rather advocates for a change in the way test
cricket in the sub-continent is perceived. The Wankhede track, by the looks of
it on day 1, is likely to come under the microscope very soon. Chances are
post-match reviews will dwarf the limit of spin-friendly tracks and the
borderline could become even finer. If the Mumbai surface is found to be below
par the supervisors shall deserve the necessary penalty, but that shouldn’t
discourage/ridicule the preparation of spinner-assistive decks. Dust bowls are
a strict no-no, so are exaggerated green tops, but green tinge and
spin-friendly tracks should be measured by the same ruler and the only parameter to judge should be result delivery and longevity over 5 days!
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