Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

2012 win in India a proud series of career: Anderson

- N Ananthanar­ayanan sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com Press Trust of India sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

: Call it summer or monsoon it was the other ‘K’ who dominated the Indian sporting space for almost two months. Harry Kane, the young England football captain, took his team to the semi-finals of a World Cup that brought every other sporting activity to a halt, or overshadow­ed them. But it’s time he took a backseat – surely in India.

The stage now belongs to the other ‘K’ – Virat Kohli. He has arrived to an England summer which feels as dry and Indian as it can. Four years after enduring a bleak patch in an otherwise brilliant career, the India captain knows he can do to Kane in England and elsewhere – occupy the space and minds of fans and media.

The five-Test series starting in Edgbaston, Birmingham on August 1 – the first of at least three sold out matches – gives Kohli the batsman the perfect chance to remove the asterisk against his Test numbers – 134 runs in 10 innings in England on the 2014 tour.

James Anderson got him four out of 10 times in the series as Kohli floundered against swing in conditions that were far more helpful to the hosts, India subsiding from 1-0 up after two Tests to 1-3.

Kohli is a transforme­d player, skipper on a mission, and 3,699 Test runs to the good embellishe­d with 15 centuries (he has 21 in all) since that low caused mainly due to uncertaint­y outside off-stump.

But he will be judged as a batsman and captain, although with the bat he has left his calling card in Australia and South Africa since England.

Cricket fans and adversarie­s acknowledg­e Kohli’s aura, as heir to Sachin Tendulkar. He has played down batting comparison­s with his idol. But Kohli does face all expectatio­ns and pressures of the man he carried on his shoulder after the 2011 World Cup triumph.

England are not exactly in great shape, and there are doubts over their batting and bowling durability. It will need individual­s to stand up. And Anderson saying Kohli will be anxious to score runs makes it clear who they would desperatel­y want to keep away from the crease.

Kohli has said he no longer has the scars from 2014. But a sound start will be crucial, at least to end the talk of leg-spinner Adil Rashid bowling him with a classical leg-break to help England win the Headingley ODI and the series 2-1. If pitches are benign, Kohli will anyway get lot of batting support.

But in England, his leadership will be closely watched, and tested the most. Conditions quickly change, making decision-making vital.

It will make a huge demand on the captain. Even before a ball is bowled in the three-day warm-up game against Essex starting Thursday, there is much interest over how Kohli addresses certain areas, after decisions in the 1-2 series loss in South Africa earlier this year felt more disruptive than proactive.

Not selecting his deputy Ajinkya Rahane for the first two Tests, and Umesh Yadav for all three matches without any explanatio­n, were two of them. One would never know if India would have won the first of their three big tours if Rahane had provided his typical overseas solidity.

Getting the openers right and whether to include KL Rahul early in the eleven, getting the pace attack going after injuries, taking a call on R Ashwin or Kuldeep Yadav or Ravindra Jadeja if India play one spinner, there will be plenty on Kohli’s, and coach Ravi Shastri’s, plate.

The next 50 days could be the most significan­t in Virat Kohli’s career.

The Ashes remains the pinnacle of Test cricket for James Anderson “like any Englishman” but the showdowns against India also rank pretty high as the world’s No 1 side brings out the best in him -- the 2012 away series being a case in point.

“We have played against South Africa when they were No 1 in the world and that was a good test, and India is exactly the same for me,” said Anderson ahead of the five-match Test series starting August 1 in Birmingham.

“2012 was one of the best series I have played in, for me, in India. As a seam bowler, you go to India and everyone says that the spinners will take wickets so you want to prove to people that you can succeed in those conditions,” he said. “So for me that was a really proud series of my career. You always want to play against the best and do well against the best. That always inspires me to try and push myself and play as well as you can,” he added. Anderson had played a starring role in England’s 2-1 series win in India back in 2012, with 12 scalps in four matches. The pacer, who boasts of 540 wickets in 138 Tests, said that victory was at par with many of his Ashes performanc­es.

“I think there has always been a good healthy rivalry between India and England. Every series I have played in, whether it was one-day or Test cricket, it has always been really competitiv­e and a really high standard of cricket,” he said.

“For me, for an Englishman, the Ashes, it is the pinnacle. If you ask the Australian­s, they will probably say the same. It is the biggest series in Test cricket, the one you look forward to the most and the one that you want to win at any cost. But for me, playing against the best teams is also what you want to do.”

Anderson said he is looking forward to challengin­g himself against India and the onus would be on England’s senior players to perform.

“This summer we have felt that we have a bigger responsibi­lity to the team in putting in good performanc­es. We are the senior players. I have a good partnershi­p with Stuart Broad and we need to show that in our responsibi­lities because we are the senior players,” he asserted.

“So that’s exactly how we will prepare for this series. We want to go into this series in as good a form as possible and be as fit as possible, because we know that if we play well, we have a good chance of winning,” Anderson said.

FINAL FRONTIER Course of Test series could be dictated by India captain’s ability to transform his poor batting record NEW DELHI VIRAT KOHLI IN TESTS LONDON:

 ?? AFP Stats: S PERVEZ QAISER REUTERS ?? India captain Virat Kohli will look to set right his poor away Test record against England. James Anderson starred in England’s 21 win vs India in 2012.
AFP Stats: S PERVEZ QAISER REUTERS India captain Virat Kohli will look to set right his poor away Test record against England. James Anderson starred in England’s 21 win vs India in 2012.

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