H Metro

INDIA’S KEEPING DILEMMA

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RISHABH Pant dropped two catches in the third Test against Australia yesterday, giving further ammunition to detractors who say he should be dropped as India’s Test wicketkeep­er in favour of Wriddhiman Saha.

Since Pant’s test debut in 2018, India have faced the dilemma whether to pick 36-year-old Saha, considered technicall­y the best glovesman in India, or Pant who is far more flamboyant with the bat.

Pant’s keeping has been under constant scrutiny and the stumper dropped Australia’s debutant opener Will Pucovski twice on the rain-hit opening day of the third Test to renew that debate.

Pucovski was on 26 when he edged Ravichandr­an Ashwin but Pant, standing up to the offspinner, spilt the catch.

The opener had added another six runs to his tally when he gloved a short delivery from Mohammed Siraj and Pant scurried back and leapt but could not complete the catch.

Saha kept wickets in the first test in Adelaide but Pant replaced him in Melbourne and has retained his place in Sydney.

Pant averages 0.86 dropped catches per test played since 2018, which is worst among all the keepers who have played 10 matches in that time, according to CricViz, which specialise­s in cricket data analysis.

Pant’s catch success per centage against spin (56 per cent) is significan­tly lower than against pace (93 per cent), it said.

The wicketkeep­er was trolled on social media after his slip-ups but teammate Siraj offered words of consolatio­n.

“It’s part of the game, we all drop catches,” Siraj said.

“Bowlers do get a little frustrated when catches are dropped but you can’t help it.” Former India stumper Parthiv Patel detected a flaw in Pant’s technique against spinners.

“He was trying to catch with hard hands,” Patel, who played 25 tests and 38 ODIs between 20022018, told Cricbuzz website.

“On a difficult track like this, you have to try and catch with soft hands. Also, your fingers should point downwards, and not forward,” Patel added.

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