Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Can England spin a surprise?

After Underwood, Edmonds and Panesar, will Leach carry forward a trend of left-arm spinners doing well in India?

- Somshuvra Laha

NEW DELHI: Three times have England won a Test series in India after Independen­ce—3-1 in 1976-77, 2-1 in 1984-85 and 2-1 in 2012-13. Each time, a left-arm spinner has played a crucial role—monty Panesar (17 wickets) in 2012-13, Phil Edmonds (14 wickets) in 1984-85 and Derek Underwood (29 wickets) in 1976-77. Only once in four tours of India post-2000 did England not bring a left-arm spinner. On that 2016-17 tour, where England relied on leg-spinner Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali’s off-break, India notched their best ever series win at home: 4-0.

Perhaps sobered by that defeat, England have brought left-armer Jack Leach for the upcoming four-test tour, beginning in Chennai on Friday, with off-spinner Dom Bess expected to pair him.

The recently concluded tour of Sri Lanka (Leach ended with 10 wickets and Bess 12) showed they tend to be more effective when the pitch wears down. But England will be forced to place a lot of faith in them, knowing how the left-arm-off-break combinatio­n has been particular­ly incisive against India (Panesargra­eme Swann (2012-13 and Edmonds-pat Pocock 1984-85). Leach holds the key though. Visually, it is straining for a right-hand batsman to face a left-armer. Picking the ball, despite bigger sightscree­n these days, becomes tricky when a leftarmer goes wide of the pitch. That, in turn, creates a sharp angle, decisively pushing the batsman onto his backfoot. Shot selection becomes a worry when the ball holds its line.

That explains why nine of Panesar’s 17 wickets in 2012-13 were either bowled or lbw. And when it spins away prodigious­ly? Mayhem strikes.

Barring the period post 2010 that saw Rangana Herath take wickets in heaps, left-arm spinners have normally stayed below the radar. Only Ravindra Jadeja and South Africa’s Keshav Maharaj operate with some consistenc­y now.

That makes England’s ability to almost consistent­ly send leftarm spinners here even more remarkable. Leach, with a 12-Test experience, may seem a lesser threat than those India have faced before.

But he does have the ability to set up the batsman playing against spin by going wide of the pitch. Leach feels that could play out well in India. “It is probably more about how the ball gets to the batsman in terms of trajectory,” Leach said.

“There have been other successful bowlers who didn’t bowl as fast as Monty did. It is about sticking to my strengths and knowing what my optimum pace is and then going up and down from there,” he said.

On his first tour, Leach may not get it right against batsmen who take immense pride in subduing spinners. After all, it took Panesar two tours (2005-06 and 2008-09) to get his first fivewicket haul (Mumbai, 2012) in India. Giles, too, is remembered for his negative lines at Sachin Tendulkar. But India have historical­ly been a little more edgy against left-arm spinners.

The overwhelmi­ng number of right-handed batsmen also give

Leach a decent chance, at least on paper. Another statistic that needs to be factored in is India’s increased aggression towards spinners at home. It has resulted in some jaw-dropping averages against spin (Cheteshwar Pujara averages 75.92 and Virat Kohli 70.47) but they have also become more susceptibl­e to spin at home over the years.

Take for example the last decade (2001-11) when three out of the top five overseas bowlers in India were pacers. In the next decade (2011-21) all five were spinners. With James Anderson and Stuart Broad among England’s ranks, India may start their innings on a cautious note. That means Bess and Leach may have a better chance of taking wickets since India are expected to come down hard on them. Also, Indian pitches are traditiona­lly slow, giving batsmen enough time to sort out spinners’ lengths. The challenge for England will be to prevent India from getting upper hand.

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