Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

‘3 Lions’ GOAT: Anderson reverses ball, and age

There may be difference­s on specifics, but strategic convergenc­e will guide Indo-US ties

- Rudraneil Sengupta letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The scoreboard may suggest that spinners Dom Bess and Jack Leach were the principal assassins. It may also reflect that Joe Root batted the home side out of the game. But, for those who watched what happened, it is perhaps fitting that India were handed a rare home Test defeat — only their fourth in a decade — on the back of a devastatin­g final-day spell from an ageless fast bowler.

At 38, after 18 years of cricket for England, Jimmy Anderson is simply continuing with a barely believable vein of form which saw him become the most prolific fast bowler in Test history in 2018. Nothing seems to stop him — not age, for sure; not the inevitable loss of pace; certainly not the conditions.

On fast, bouncy pitches, Anderson uses the seam to deadly effect, coupled with his absolute mastery over line and length. Give him a dusty, tired and slow Chepauk pitch and he makes the ball sing with reverse swing. He can force batsmen to play on the front foot on a pitch that has nothing for bowlers. He has the uncanny ability to use reverse swing both ways — the traditiona­l one that jags in to the right-handed batsman, but also one that moves away at the last moment.

He hides the ball with his other hand — a new trick he’s started using recently — leaving batsmen with little option but to do what Shubman Gill did in Chennai by stepping forward with a straight bat. The ball swerved and snuck through the miniscule gap between bat and pad and sent the off stump into a

cartwheel. Ajinkya Rahane was done in by a replica in the same over. And with those two deliveries, the match was virtually over, setting the stage for England’s 227-run win.

There is no other cricketer playing now for any team who has featured in four Test victories against India in India. It’s just what Anderson does. He has played a critical role in not one but three victorious Ashes campaigns, and he had begun his Test career with a fifer on debut.

Yet, like all long careers, he has had his share of struggles.

Soon after his debut he was shunted into the background, at best used as a net bowler. He worked on changing his action, lost both pace and accuracy. An injury kept him out for most of 2006. The very next year, Anderson came back into cricket a transforme­d bowler — not a tearaway with raw aggression any more, but a bowler with an unmatched arsenal of weapons.

In England, he marked his second coming with a sevenwicke­t haul in an innings against New Zealand. By 2010, he had also found an accuracy that made him nearly unplayable. He showed that off on the grandest stage, picking up 24 wickets in the 2010-11 Ashes tour of Australia to hand England the urn.

It is also fitting that in 2018, Anderson went past Glen Mcgrath’s record for most Test wickets by a fast bowler with the wicket of Mohammed Shami in a 4-1 rout over India — it was his 564th wicket, and he had taken more of those against India than any other opponent.

It establishe­d his credential­s as England’s GOAT (greatest of all time) — at least in the bowling department. And from 564 to 611 — Rishabh Pant in Chennai — Anderson, if it’s possible, only seems to be getting sharper.

In their first conversati­on after Joe Biden took over as the 46th President of the United States (US), Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi and Mr Biden reiterated their commitment to a strong India-US relationsh­ip. At a time when there is some concern in New Delhi about the Biden administra­tion’s approach to China, both the US and Indian statements on the conversati­on highlight the strategic convergenc­e on a free and open Indo-Pacific. Indeed, the White House statement goes a step further in suggesting that the two leaders agreed on the principles of freedom of navigation, territoria­l integrity and building a strong regional architectu­re through Quad. This is good news for India, for it is this strategic alignment on China that has driven deeper security, intelligen­ce and defence ties between the two countries.

The two leaders also spoke about democracy being a binding factor between the two countries. While the Indian readout of the conversati­on mentioned that the relationsh­ip is “firmly anchored in a shared commitment to democratic values”, besides strategic interests, the US statement was more explicit — with President Biden underscori­ng his “desire to defend democratic institutio­ns and norms around the world”. Once again, this is good news, for it is democracie­s which must stand at the forefront of battling the authoritar­ian model presented by China. But this also means that the quality of Indian democracy will emerge in bilateral discussion­s. The State Department statement on the farm protests last week and the discussion held by the India Caucus on the Hill show that India will have to more effectivel­y underline its democratic credential­s to allay apprehensi­ons. Given that the US statement mentioned Myanmar, and India’s did not, there is also a possibilit­y of difference­s on how to approach democracy promotion in the region and beyond.

The two sides also agreed to collaborat­e more deeply on climate. Mr Biden will find that India’s position has shifted quite radically from the time he was last in office when New Delhi was viewed as a reluctant partner — India has stopped being defensive on climate and worked on its Paris commitment­s seriously. And finally, counterter­rorism will continue to rank high on the list of priorities, and the US must internalis­e that this battle will remain incomplete till it holds Pakistan accountabl­e. What is clear is that notwithsta­nding possible missteps, the Delhi-DC dance will continue under the new administra­tion.

 ?? PTI ?? James Anderson during the Chennai Test on Tuesday.
PTI James Anderson during the Chennai Test on Tuesday.

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