Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Spinners coming into play will boost India in World T20

- PRADEEP MAGAZINE

It is a universall­y accepted prognosis in cricket that the shorter the format, the more difficult it is to predict the result of the match. What this statement implies is that there are no favourites in a T20 match.

That was the reason why the experts, who generally go by statistica­l records and the form book, were extremely reluctant to predict the winner of the Asia Cup final, once the match was reduced to a 15-overs-a-side contest.

Skipper MS Dhoni himself had an enigmatic smile when asked how confident he was of winning after the toss had fallen in his favour. It was clear from what he said that when it is hard to even be too sure of a T20 match outcome, a reduction by five overs each has now made it harder to pick a winner.

This has been the convention­al wisdom so far, which even the strongest purveyors of T20 cricket believe in no matter what their public stand may be.

Seen in this context, the headlines in most papers to the effect that “Asia Cup today, World Cup tomorrow” may sound an opti- mistic assertion, that is pandering to the Indian cricket fans’ desire to see their team win the championsh­ip. NO FAVOURITES Can any team be called favourites for the T20 World Cup? Obviously not, though the kind of cricket India have played in the last month or so, first in Australia and now in Bangladesh, does suggest that they would be terribly disappoint­ed if the Championsh­ip eludes them.

A formidable batting top half and now a pace attack that has so far responded positively to pressure situations has made India look almost invincible even in this format.

Unlike in Bangladesh where the wickets were seamer friendly, India will be playing in far more amiable surroundin­gs and on surfaces where batsmen are the undisputed kings.

This would make them even more confident of putting up scores that teams much stronger than what they encountere­d in the Asia Cup would find difficult to match. THE DIFFICULT BIT The difficult part would be the seam bowling, which on flat Indian wickets may find the big-hitting Australian­s, South Africans and New Zealanders hard to contain. In Australia, the Indian batsmen showed that if conditions favoured batsmen, no score is too big for them to chase.

The same would be true for Indian conditions with one big plus being that the spinners could come into play far more than they do outside India.

All these point to India being the most favourable candidate to win the championsh­ip, a fact that is being acknowledg­ed by other teams as well.

If there are doubts which can’t be banished from the mind, it is the very unpredicta­ble nature of this format, where luck and chance can play a much bigger role in deciding the outcome of a match than in the longer formats.

 ??  ?? Harbhajan Singh (left) is captain MS Dhoni’s most experience­d spinner in the India squad for the WT20.
Harbhajan Singh (left) is captain MS Dhoni’s most experience­d spinner in the India squad for the WT20.
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