Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

KOHLI & CO: SWAGGER IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR SUCCESS

- SOUMYA BHATTACHAR­YA

On the eve of the fifth and final Test against England in London in September, the series already lost 1-3, another abject away tour drawing to a close, India coach Ravi Shastri said he believed that the current side was the best India team to have played overseas in the past 15 to 20 years.

India lost the fifth Test by 118 runs, and the series 1-4.

After the match, India captain Virat Kohli was asked whether, in view of the score line, he agreed with Shastri’s assessment of the team. “We have to believe we are the best side. Why not?” he snapped, with the combinatio­n of arrogance, disdain and sense of entitlemen­t that is his default setting at press conference­s.

Self-belief is a valuable asset in sport. In sport, as in life, self-aggrandise­ment can be a ruinous trait.

Elite athletes tend to live in a bubble. But that bubble should not be so impervious as to insulate them from context, recent sporting history, and facts.

Performanc­es away from home, where conditions are unfamiliar and demanding, are the benchmarks on which any cricket team is judged. How an India team plays outside Asia is its genuine test, and indicator of quality and toughness. This side, led by Kohli, has so far played eight Tests outside Asia. All of them were in 2018, by which time the side had been together long enough to find its feet as a collective unit. India has won two, and lost six of those.

Of the three Tests in South Africa, India lost two and won one, a victory in a dead rubber, after the series had been surrendere­d. In England, India won one, and lost four. It emphatical­ly lost both series it has played outside Asia.

This has not always been the case in the period Shastri referred to: the past 15 to 20 years. Ever since Sourav Ganguly becam India captain in 2000, India began to trave well. In 2002, led by Ganguly, India drew 1-1 in England in a three-Test series. In 2003-04, again led by Ganguly, India held Australia, at the time easily the best si in the world, to a 1-1 draw in Australia. Rahul Dravid led India to a 1-0 series triumph in England in 200 In 2010-11, MS Dhoni’s India dre the series 1-1 in South Africa. (There were many other famou series wins in this period, be it against the all-conquering Australian­s in India in 2001 or in Pakistan in 2004, but, for the sake of consistenc­y, let us stick to Test series outside Asia.)

Kohli’s side has a long, hard road to travel before it can even beg to match these exploits.

It is easy to see why that is the case. Under Kohli, India has played different elevens in 38 consecutiv­e Tests. There has been too much chopping and changing, too much uncertaint­y, too much ad hocism. For the upcoming tour to Australia, India has named a much larger than usual, 18-man squad, evidence that the team management is unsure of who the best bets are.

Players have not been allowed to settle. The lack of confidence in batsmen such as Ajinkya Rahane and Cheteshwar Pujara, who had previously performed creditably away from home, is evident. Team seleccontr­ibuting tion has been misguided, to the series losses.

Kohli is undoubtedl­y one of the greatest tsmen of the modern era. But as a ptain, he lacks tactical nous. ggression on and off the field nnot replace shrewdness, ile and quick thinking. He n make a start by reading ike Brearley’s The Art of aptaincy.

The margins are fine elite sport. Every am has to seize the oment. The ability discern a turning oint, win it, and ange the arrative of a ame to one’s vantage is the allmark of all reat teams. his current ndia team has consistent­ly failed to do that, in match after match, outside Asia. Unless Kohli’s side can, at decisive junctures, hold its nerve, and win those big moments, it will not even be in contention to be the best India side to play overseas in the past 15 to 20 years.

And yet, inexplicab­ly, talk of greatness swirls like white noise around this team. Self-congratula­tion echoes around it. The two touchstone­s Kohli and his men swear (and the verb is chosen advisedly) by are attitude and intensity. The messaging from both captain and coach has been that, as long as their play is enlivened by these two qualities, nothing else matters. But swagger is no substitute for success.

Redemption may arrive in Australia over the next few months. The hosts are enfeebled by the suspension of two of their best batsmen, Steve Smith and David Warner. Introspect­ing about what ails the culture of the game, Australian cricket is at particular­ly low ebb. But then, the England side to which India lost 1-4 was the weakest in years, and with the worst home record among the top Test teams.

This India Test team is the not the worst we have had. Not by some distance. It is not the best in the past 15 to 20 years. Not by some distance. It is merely the most overrated, the most hyped team to have ever played Test cricket for India. (Spinoff will appear every fortnight)

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