Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Lanka feast created false all-is-well feeling

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weak Sri Lanka. Successive triumphs over substandar­d opposition created a false ‘all-is-well’ feeling, batting averages got bloated and the team drifted away from reality. The Cape Town Test once again highlighte­d Indian cricket’s traditiona­l weaknesses. The truth is, despite frequent tours abroad, the Indian team does not travel well and starts poorly. Indian batsmen, despite Test averages touching 50, are still to discover ways to cope with fast bowler-friendly conditions.

Driving through the line and hitting on the up with front foot planted down the track is fine in India. But on pitches overseas this is inviting disaster --- as unsafe as driving against the flow of traffic on a busy highway. Technique guru Sunil Gavaskar, having analysed the problem, made this sharp comment: Without back-foot play, the batsmen will remain on the back-foot!

Virat took the Cape Town blow on the chin, refusing to blame the wicket/ team selection/ lack of preparatio­n and offered no excuses. He, instead, spoke about ‘rectifying mistakes’ and hoped batsmen play with intent.

Actually, as much as players, the BCCI needs to be on the ball. The men in control, whether profession­ally hired or nominated by the court, must look to advance Indian cricket. It is great to secure fat commercial deals, sort out free pass allocation and disallow needless travel but these are peripheral­s, not core issues.

A year since the BCCI suffered a surgical strike, Indian cricket is caught in quicksand, stuck with no sign of progress. Rahul Dravid once said the purpose of domestic cricket is to promote quality and develop cricketers who can win matches for India. Sadly, domestic cricket is not aligned to this objective and Ranji is treated in a step-motherly manner. Similarly, internatio­nal cricket is often meaningles­s with matches scheduled to satisfy a broadcaste­r or used as a lollipop gifted to a country that voted in support in a boardroom battle.

Players have to go out and cope with challenges flung at them. To succeed consistent­ly, they need back-end support which takes care of issues of scheduling, rest, workload, financial compositio­n and quality wickets. Coach Shastri announced the team’s desire to win overseas and Kohli has demonstrat­ed he won’t compromise on commitment. The question is: Will BCCI think beyond ‘control’ and look to contribute in this quest for excellence?

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Fans exhorting Shikhar Dhawan and Rohit Sharma at Cape Town were left disappoint­ed as both failed with the bat.
AP PHOTO Fans exhorting Shikhar Dhawan and Rohit Sharma at Cape Town were left disappoint­ed as both failed with the bat.
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