The googly from Amit Mishra on the last delivery of the 85th
over of Sri Lanka’s second innings overwhelmed the number 11 batsman Nuwan
Pradeep and sealed a famous, rare series win for India in the island nation. Celebrations,
accolades followed and a sense of satisfaction settled on the contemplation of
India’s away tours’ log-book for the last two seasons (Oct 2013-Sep 2015).
India travelled to 6 test-playing nations within ~21 months, played 17 matches,
won only 3 but ticked a lot of boxes affirmatively.
Vijay, Dhawan, Pujara, Kohli, Rohit, Rahane, Dhoni were
India’s top 7 in the first test against South Africa in Johannesburg in
December 2013; Rahul, Pujara, Rahane, Kohli, Rohit, Binny, Naman Ojha formed
the top 7 in the latest test at Colombo versus Sri Lanka. Ashwin, Zaheer,
Ishant, Shami were the frontline bowlers then and Ashwin, Mishra, Ishant, Umesh
in the recently concluded test. Dhoni retired (from tests) in that phase, likes
of Gambhir & more recently Harbhajan were given comeback opportunities and
India test caps numbered 281 to 285 were
awarded to 5 players (Stuart Binny, Pankaj Singh, Karn Sharma, KL Rahul &
Naman Ojha) during this period. A nucleus was allowed to form and permitted to
find its path disregarding the statistics, and rightly so.
Among the talking points, the personnel in the batting
line-up and their positions have been focused majorly. Let us put up the
numbers first (Innings-Runs-Average-100s): Kohli (33-1559-48.71-7), Rahane
(32-1345-46.37-4), Vijay (29-1312-45.24-3), Dhawan (23-915-39.78-3) and Pujara
(26-908-36.32-2) feature as the top contributors. While Vijay has blossomed on
almost every tour, Dhawan’s performances have been hot and cold. Rahul flattered
to deceive but his brief stays build the perception of him being a decent
long-term investment option. Pujara began this phase on a solid footing and by
the time it ended, he was pushed to perform for survival. Among all the batsmen,
Kohli & Rahane exuded positive vibes on almost every trip; the above
statistics are testimony to this outlook. The Rohit conundrum continued its fascinating
tale, both in terms of his place in the side and his position in the line-up. Despite
promising personnel, the problem of the batting order hasn’t been sorted out just
yet and doesn’t appear to be delineated anytime sooner.
Ashwin’s reputation on foreign soil had suffered heavy
criticism during the 0-8 phase, which has changed gradually in the last two
seasons. Ishant has now assumed the position of the spearhead in the bowling
attack; although not by virtue of being the leader in-waiting, but more so due
to his experience. Yet, both in England and Sri Lanka he managed to raise his
game significantly to shift the momentum in India’s favour in crunch moments. Those
of yesteryears always yearned to have an Indian quickie rattle opposition
batsmen with pace and bounce. The turn of the century saw this happening,
albeit in patches. With likes of Shami, Umesh and Aaron being liberated to flaunt
their natural abilities, the wish of the past has started materializing more
regularly. For some strangely concerning reason Indian batsmen have started
struggling against spin, especially on away tours. A part of the problem has
been attributed to lack of quality in the spin department in the domestic
circuit, which is reflecting in the limited number of spinners pushing for a
spot in the Indian team.
One of India’s perennial problems has been the presence of ‘genuine’
all-rounder. Both Ravindra Jadeja & Stuart Binny were tried in this phase,
yet neither grasped the opportunity for cementing a place in the side. The present
team management has the mindset of fielding 5-bowlers & 5-frontline
batsmen, which creates space for multi-skilled players. Dhoni’s retirement from
this format has left a major hole, something which has many seekers. With the
team in the transition phase and multiple voids to plug, India’s domestic
circuit too should be boosted by this situation.
India should be satisfied, if not happy, with the scorelines endured during this period viz. 0-1 (2), 0-1 (2), 1-3 (5), 0-2 (4), 0-0 (1), 2-1 (3). The lack of baggage benefited the team to go through the
tough tests with naïve, ambitious intentions. The ‘process’ which was initiated
in the Dhoni-Fletcher phase has started bearing some success under the
management of Kohli-Shastri. India did miss a few opportunities in South
Africa, Australia and Sri Lanka, slipped from a commanding position a couple of
times, but for a side looking forward towards the following decade or so, this
has been a decent performance in a tricky exam. For a batsman who has weathered
a nippy, first day of a test, the second day is often his time for redemption.
Likewise, India now has the chance to cash in for having a long home-calendar
with no burden of international cricket rigours. The averages will improve,
spinners will become India’s key elements, the position on the rankings table will
rise, but even this won’t come easy in a long series against the top-ranked test
team in the world!
Comments
Post a Comment