Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

India’s wobbly top order has skipper Kohli’s job cut out

- N Ananthanar­aynan

I am not a believer in the adage captaincy can put pressure on people. It inspires them. I’d expect it to inspire him. Maybe his record is not what he would want it to be here, but he would want to put that right. If you are a great player, you can put that right, it gives you that added edge.

Both are world-class players. Joe has been playing well in one-day cricket recently, but has not got a hundred recently in Tests (11 Tests without a ton). Lot of fifties and he still averages 50 (52.28), which is excellent. We need him to score hundreds. We we need our players to score hundreds and India need theirs to. In Tests, you got to get a big score.

Virat is a very very skilful player; he is successful in all formats, which shows he adapts his game well. He has got an all-round game and is going to be a big target for England bowlers because always if you dismiss the captain it can affect the team a bit. If we don’t get him out early, then we can expect some big scores from him. I don’t think that will make any difference. But when he signed I thought that will be good for him, experience under his belt in English conditions to prepare. CHELMSFORD: At the best of times, India would have had their task cut out in an England Test series but a lone warm-up reduced by a day has left the visitors with toporder batting concerns heading into the first Test starting at Edgbaston on Wednesday.

As India arrived in the UK in June, the sole focus in the buildup was on skipper Virat Kohli reversing his poor run of the 2014 Test series when he averaged less than 14 across five Tests. England spearhead James Anderson removed him five times and renewing that battle is expected to be a high point.

A month on, the worry for Kohli should be on another count – whether the top-order batsmen will provide the platform for India’s best stroke-player to impose himself on the England bowling attack in a summer that promises to provide India the best batting opportunit­ies.

The drawn three-day practice game against Essex raised serious concerns. Opener Shikhar Dhawan bagged a pair, falling first ball in the first innings and third delivery in the second. In the first innings, pacer Matt Cole had him caught behind in the first over when the green wicket, sought by the India management, was fresh and seaming.

But Dhawan, not the most technicall­y sound among India’s batsmen, was clueless when Matthew Quinn, a New Zealandbor­n pacer, sowed doubts with a swinging delivery first and cleaned him up with the next. This on a track that had flattened out. Dhawan’s scores on the 2014 tour can’t inspire confidence – 12, 29 (Trent Bridge), 7,31 (Lord’s) and 6,37 (Southampto­n).

It must be worrying as Murali Vijay, who ground out a half-century against Essex and hit a century against Afghanista­n like Dhawan, still hasn’t played much cricket. He missed the domestic season and didn’t get a game for CSK in IPL.

However, KL Rahul made a strong case for himself in both innings, scoring 58 and 36 not out with assurance. His shot selection and timing will encourage the team management to get him to open, his favourite slot.

It is not that the No 3 spot looks secure. Cheteshwar Pujara’s patience is a virtue, especially playing away from home, but he has struggled. With Yorkshire, conditions were tougher but he averaged 14.33 from 12 innings. He made 172 runs with a highest of 41.

The revealing number is 98 of those runs came in boundaries during a period when rotating the strike is vital to ensure bowlers don’t have a grip on one batsman. Against Essex, Coles got Pujara for one run and his attempt to score faster ended at 23 with a tame flick to midwicket on a flat pitch.

It rained on Friday night and Saturday morning and more showers are forecast for Birmingham in the weekend. While it would ease the suffering due to a harsh summer, it will also lift the spirit of England’s pacers and raise India’s batting challenge a notch higher. India reach Birmingham on Saturday evening. They have three sessions to sort things out as it is crucial to start strongly in a five-test series.

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