Hindustan Times (Delhi)

India’s team selection policy has been bewilderin­g

- The author is a former Indian Test batsman. Views are personal

grace this game, he’ll also be remembered as a captain who didn’t play an identical XI in two consecutiv­e games for 37 games and counting, and also as someone who made some interestin­g choices!

Kohli dropped the team’s vicecaptai­n for the first two Tests in South Africa, dropped Cheteshwar Pujara for the first Test in England and has used Shikhar Dhawan only for the opening Test in two consecutiv­e overseas tours.

Interestin­gly, India fielded two spinners for the second Test when their opponents went with four quicks.

The pitch was green and under covers for over 24 hours, and while that ensured that India also wanted to field first (had India won the toss), it didn’t force them to play an extra seamer.

India aren’t known to travel well and that makes team-selection a critical piece in the jigsaw puzzle. Team management will have to take a harder look at its decisions.

BATTING WOES

India were at the wrong end of the conditions with both bat and ball. It was overcast on the first day when James Anderson ran through the Indian batting, it turned nice and sunny when India bowled and the clouds returned when it was India’s turn to bat again in the second innings.

It felt that even the usually unpredicta­ble English weather was hand in glove with the hosts. But good teams and champion players don’t look for excuses; they find answers instead.

From the beginning of 2018, India have played five overseas Tests and there are only two 50-plus scores from Indian batsmen besides Kohli. That’s five batsmen (minus Kohli) over 10 innings, which translates into two fifties in 50 innings.

The biggest area of concern is the lack of runs from proven overseas performers like Murali Vijay and Rahane. If your blue chip stock fails, there’s very little chance of survival.

WHY LEARN SPANISH?

Has the batting technique deteriorat­ed so much that it’s impossible to survive slightly challengin­g conditions? Yes, it has and it’s not limited to the Indian batsmen, for that’s the story across the globe. No batting unit shows the stomach for a fight when the conditions are favouring bowlers — spinners and fast bowlers alike.

There’s an obvious decline in developmen­t of skills best suited for tougher conditions and reason for that is the presence of flat pitches across the globe, even for most Test matches. If speakingre­ading English is enough to cover the countries you frequent, why would you spend time learning Spanish that you might visit once in four years?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India