Time for India to look towards the future

December 18, 2012
kohli

Nagpur, December 18: Mahendra Singh Dhoni wore a distant look while revealing his thoughts on India’s home series defeat against England. “There are not many things that will come close to the 2007 50-over World Cup loss. This is not even close to that.” In his words, there wasn’t a hint of hurt that usually accompanies such crushing defeats, especially at home.

Perhaps, Dhoni’s comments stemmed from his belief that the 2-1 defeat was an aberration. But this series, alarmingly, pointed to a different direction. India hadn’t lost a Test series on their soil for nearly a decade, and England shattered that proud record, in the process also exposing India’s lack of desire, preparation and willingness to adapt when the opponent came strongly at them.

In a strange way, the beginning of this traumatic effort by the Indians may have started in their minds itself. After the a 4-0 bashing by Australia earlier this year, Gautam Gambhir stressed on the need to prepare rank turners when teams like England and the Aussies visit India. Since then, almost every Indian player has repeated that phrase, and believed a spin-friendly pitch is the best way to take ‘revenge’ upon their tormentors.

First came England. Emphatically, we denied the visitors practice against spin in the three tour games, making them play against a few junior spinners. All England had then was artificial roughened up mats that Graham Gooch and Andy Flower used in their nets to simulate spin.

So, the first step in the conquer-England-at-home mission had been taken. But amidst all those grandstand schemes, Indians had forgotten to look at their own shortcomings.

The opening combination has been in a shambles for nearly two years, a champion batsman is set to walk into sun set sooner than later and there is no right replacement for him, and the bowling cupboard – pace and spin alike – looks almost empty, and of course, the retirement of two legends’ has left a huge void in the middle-order, and their replacements, however talented they are, need time to settle down in top-flight cricket.

But Indians were least bothered by those facts, and continued to believe in their supremacy on doctored pitches. One bad session England had at Ahmedabad also fed their conviction about their invincibility, and in sports, such notions often lead to perdition. While the Englishmen continued to work hard at the nets, the Indians preferred ‘optional nets’ even a day before a Test match.

That lack of preparation was quite evident in Mumbai when English spinners, especially Monty Panesar, harrowed them. They weren’t up to the mark when Panesar spun the ball around them in the mid-90 kmph, and it was quite a muddling sight to see them hopping and edging around against a type of bowler they should have dominated with ease.

Everything in Mumbai was in India’s favour – pitch, toss and even runs in the first innings, a 300-plus total to be precise. Still they slipped into a defeat, and you would naturally expect an effort to deal with the situation. There wasn’t any. Dhoni kept on insisting on the need for more such pitches to suit India’s game plan, revealing the state of denial in which the Indians have been inhabiting for a while now.

What Indians need to do now is to look in the mirror and accept that they have become — an ordinary Test side. They perforce have to look at the positives such as the form showed by Cheteshwer Pujara and Virat Kohli (in the final Test), and realise that the time has come to move forward rather than falling back upon past records. Just that they need to have the courage for an honest introspection!



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March 7,2020

Melbourne, Mar 7: He will be supporting Australia for sure but former pacer Brett Lee feels an Indian victory in Sunday's T20 Word Cup final could be a "start of a major breakthrough" for the women's game in the cricket-mad country.

India and Australia will lock horns in what is expected to be a blockbuster title clash at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

"As an Australian, I'd love nothing more than for (Meg) Lanning's team to do the job. But if India were to win the World Cup for the first time, victory would do so much for women's cricket in a country that already adores the sport," Lee wrote in an ICC column.

"This could be the start of a major breakthrough, particularly with the amount of talent that is coming through."

The former speedster said Australia will have to look for ways to counter the in-form 16-year-old Shafali Verma.

"In Shafali Verma, India boast one of the most talented players in the world and you feel that for Australia to win the game, dismissing her will likely be their first job.

"I've been so impressed with the opener - it's staggering to believe she's only 16 with the confidence she has in her own ability and the way she strikes the ball so cleanly.

"She's such good fun to watch and I'm not sure the women's game has seen anyone like her for such a long time."

Shafali has been the star of the tournament, having amassed 161 runs at a strike rate of 161, consistently providing India solid starts, and that was not lost on Lee.

"To be the world's best T20 batter already shows just how far she has progressed in such a short space of time and the experience in this tournament will hold her in good stead for years to come.

"Even with the way she's played in Australia and her fearless brand of cricket, you still get the feeling she has more to come as well."

He reckoned Shafali may have another big score awaiting her.

"She's got a big score in her locker and there's probably no better place to do that than the MCG. Shafali is already a record breaker but if she can steer her side to their first Women's T20 World Cup title at just 16, then the sky really is the limit for her career."

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Agencies
February 25,2020

Bengaluru, Feb 25: India opening batsman KL Rahul will be available for Karnataka's Ranji Trophy semi-final clash against Bengal at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata on February 29.

Rahul had asked to be rested from Karnataka's quarter-final match but is now available for the climactic stages of the Ranji Trophy. 

Karnataka had already been strengthened by the addition of Manish Pandey for the quarter-finals, with both Pandey and Rahul having returned from New Zealand after India completed the limited-overs leg of their tour, ESPNcricinfo reported.

Last year's finalists Saurashtra will take on Gujarat in the other semi-final at Rajkot. The other prominent players who will be part of the last four include Parthiv Patel (Gujarat), Jaydev Unadkat (Saurashtra) and Manoj Tiwary (Bengal).

Gujarat, Bengal, Karnataka, and Saurashtra had finished on top of the combined Groups A and B table, and all four progressed to the semi-finals after dominating their respective quarter-final matches.

Rahul has been phenomenal with the bat in the limited-overs series against Australia and New Zealand. He scored one century and four fifty-plus scores in his last ten innings in ODIs and T20Is combined

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Agencies
January 16,2020

New Delhi, Jan 16: Mahendra Singh Dhoni was on Thursday dropped from the BCCI's list of centrally contracted players, raising fresh doubts on the future of the former India captain who has not played since the World Cup semifinal loss to New Zealand last year.

The BCCI announced the central contracts for the period of October 2019 to September 2020. Dhoni was in the A category, which fetches a player Rs 5 crore, until last year.

Skipper Virat Kohli, his deputy Rohit Sharma and top pacer Jasprit Bumrah were retained in the highest A+ bracket of Rs 7 crore.

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