Tuesday 11 December 2012

Wanted — a batsman who can ‘stand and defy’


Retirement of Dravid and Laxman has created a void in the dressing room

Cheteshwar Pujara playes a shot to the boundary on the second day of the 1st test match between India and England at the Sardar Patel Stadium in Motera, Ahmebdad on 16, November, 2012.

V.V.S. Laxman was a cricketer’s cricketer; Rahul Dravid a captain’s. When Laxman batted, cricketers set work aside and watched.

He was such a delight. Dravid’s work at the crease gave the captain his most relaxed phases. There was surety in Dravid’s batting and artistry in Laxman’s.

Their absence is hurting Indian cricket. Both took conscious decisions to bow out in glory rather than fade away in distress. It was “tough and difficult” for Laxman and Dravid as they decided to retire and accept new roles.

Their legendary match-winning feats have been well documented and narrated time and again, but their departure also created a void in the dressing room. The team lost two complete batsmen, who could not only bat to win but also bat to draw.

As good as a win

In times when the stress on result in Tests is so overwhelming, it was once an achievement if the team could force a draw against strong opponents. There were all kinds of drawn encounters. The exciting draw, like when the tail-enders (Shivlal Yadav, 28 balls and Karsan Ghavri, 36 balls) hung on to pull off a pulsating draw against Australia at Adelaide in 1981. It was as good as a match won.

There was also the dull draw when teams batted only one innings each and then there was the DDD (dull, dreary, draw) when the spectators found nothing palatable even on the fourth day. The art of drawing a match is gradually becoming a thing of the past.

When India was confronted with a deficit of 207 runs at the Eden Gardens, the only option left for the home team was to bat for a draw.

A victory was highly improbable. The team would have had to bat four sessions. “Quite possible,” Dravid remarked on television. Obviously he had forgotten he was not in the squad anymore. If anyone had the tenacity to put his hand up and guide the rest, it would have been Dravid.

Batting is not just about scoring runs. It also involves wearing down the attack. “Grinding” as Dravid would say.

For Laxman, batting meant domination in the middle, scoring at will, taming the bowlers with a judicious mix of aggression and caution. Dravid was an able foil at the other end, making runs with unwavering concentration. The current team lacks the tenacity that Dravid and Laxman brought to the middle.

There is a match-winner in Virender Sehwag. However, he knows just one way to bat. It would not work in his favour if Sehwag were to change his style and be defensive. He would get out quickly. Just as Dravid had analysed his batting once sensibly. He accepted he could not bat like Sehwag or Sourav Ganguly, strokeful both, because he would “get out” cheaply.

So, Dravid, to serve the interests of the team better, evolved into an anchorman even though he was a brilliant strokeplayer in his formative years of international cricket. Indian cricket benefited immensely from his rock-like presence.

Laxman had a distinct style. It was not one-dimensional, hit the ball, play shots constantly. No. He had a tight defence and employed it doggedly when the going got tough. His technique was second to none when facing spinners or the fast bowlers in hostile conditions. He could smother the spin, the ball not straying out of the square, and frustrate the fast bowlers with his impeccable judgment of leaving the ball.

Experts believe the art of leaving the ball has diminished considerably in modern cricket because of the two shorter formats of the game. Batsmen tend to poke and nudge out of habit.

Cheteshwar Pujara comes closest to becoming the anchorman, but he has not understood his role fully regardless of the two centuries in this series. He is yet to be tested in severe conditions and in any case he is not even remotely close to being counted as the man for crisis. To expect him to slip into Dravid’s role would be unfair. These are early times and Pujara has a long way to go.

India sorely missed the likes of Dravid and Laxman at the Eden Gardens as the Englishmen inflicted a Test defeat in succession, the former would have shut out the bowlers and the latter slammed them into submission.

With Sachin Tendulkar going through a most forgettable phase of his career, the team has failed to cope with the pressures in the middle order.

Former India captain Anil Kumble had suggested a re-look at Mohammad Kaif, who has the temperament to bat long like Chetan Chauhan and Yashpal Sharma did in days when sometimes a draw would give no less joy than a victory. India is sorely missing a batsman who can ‘stand and defy’.

Source: The Hindu

Sunday 9 December 2012

Sehwag hits out at media for calling Pujara Dravid's replacement



Taking a dig at the media for calling young talent Cheteshwar Pujara a replacement for retired batting great Rahul Dravid, dashing willower Virender Sehwag Saturday suggested they should have rather waited for a few more matches.

"When (Cheteshwar) Pujara scored double and a hundred, only you guys (media) said he's a replacement for Rahul Dravid.

"You didn't wait for a couple of matches. And now media is saying that Dravid and VVS (Laxman are not there," Sehwag told media persons to queries whether he was missing the two former cricketers.

Indian batting came apart in the second innings on day four of the third cricket Test match against England Saturday, and the hosts were staring at defeat with only a 32-run lead over England and one wicket in hand.

While Dravid retired from international cricket in March, Laxman hung up his boots in August.

Pujara scored an unbeaten 206 in the opening Test of the series at Ahmedabad, and followed it up with 135 in the second match at Mumbai.

The two consecutive hundreds had sent the media into raptures, triggering lot of comparisons with Dravid.

However, Sehwag exuded confidence that the youngsters will come good with time.

"It's a transitional period for us. They will bounce back and score runs."

Source: DNA

Friday 7 December 2012

[Video] Cheteshwar Pujara - Dil mein hindustan hain



Cheteshwar Pujara - Dil mein hindustan hain (ESPN Star cricket TVC)

Trevor Penney defends Cheteshwar Pujara for dropping Alastair Cook


India's fielding coach Trevor Penney Thursday defended Cheteshwar Pujara who dropped England captain Alastair Cook at the slips. The opener then went on to score a magnificent unbeaten 136 to put his team in a commanding position against India at the Eden Gardens on the second day of the third cricket Test.


"Pujara has been practising slip catching for quite a while now. He is by far our best catcher. Obviously it was a big mistake, but such things do happen in cricket," Penney told media persons.

The dropped chance was one of the very few opportunities that came India's way during the day. Cook, then on 17, had edged Zaheer Khan's away going delivery.



Penney, however, had no answers for the Indian team keeping on juggling fielders in the slip cordon.

"Ravichandran Ashwin, Pujara and Virat Kohli have been practising slip catching and they are good fielders and doing well at the nets. They are perhaps capable enough to replace (Rahul) Dravid and (VVS) Laxman who were excellent slip catchers," said Penney.

But he conceded that the Indians were a bit off colour in the field and conceded some runs which should not have been.

"Maybe we didn't put the best fielders in the right positions. We did not take our chances. Those little things matter a lot in the end," he said.

The coach hoped that the hosts would make a comeback in the match after England batted well to reach 216 for one.

"Tomorrow is a fresh day and if we can take some quick wickets we can be back in the match," he added.

Source: TOI
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