England had the better of the exchanges
Partab Ramchand - 24 December 2001
For a team that was expected to lose the Test series 3-0, a 1-0 defeat
is something to be proud of. And the England team, written off as
probably the weakest team from that country to visit India, finally
proved its mettle in no uncertain terms after the Mohali disaster.
Indeed, they scored moral victories in both Tests by gaining the first
innings lead and having the better of the exchanges. For a side palpably
weaker on paper, it was a splendid performance and in the final analysis
it can be stated that they had the edge over India in every department
of the game - batting, bowling, fielding, wicket-keeping and, most
strikingly, captaincy.
If anything, in the truncated play possible at Bangalore,
England proved that their improved performance at Ahmedabad was no
fluke, that they had the measure of the hotly fancied home team, and
that if this was a five match series, they would probably be favourites
to win.
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Much has been said and written about Nasser Hussain's tactics of having
Ashley Giles bowling outside the leg stump to Sachin Tendulkar. For the
life of me, I can't understand all the criticism. Sure, it isn't pretty
to watch and stalls the proceedings. But it is within the laws of the
game. Surely, one cannot expect the England bowlers to send down half
volleys outside the off stump to the world's best batsman. It was a
matter of strategy, pure and simple. Hussain, with the weaker side, and
a particularly limp bowling line-up, adopted the right tactics under the
circumstances as far as I am concerned.
Improvisation is the name of the game these days what with a lot of one
day shots finding their way into Test cricket, where there are no field
restrictions. Tendulkar himself showed the way in the second Test when
he flicked the medium-pacers, bowling to a 7-2 off side field, deftly to
the fence at mid-wicket or square leg, off balls bowled on the off
stump. What stopped him from taking similar unorthodox steps this time?
It is always better to counter attack and plan a strategy that exposes
the rival captain's tactics instead of cribbing. The batsman must keep
in mind the fact that if one side of the field is packed, the other has
to be invitingly open and that's where his sights should be.
Indeed, I am inclined to applaud Hussain for being a thinking captain. A
lot of thought had obviously gone into his game plan for each Indian
cricketer and he reckoned that with his inexperienced bowling line-up,
Tendulkar could be bottled up by the kind of strategy he employed, which
could see the latter lose his patience and be dismissed. This is exactly
what happened at Bangalore. If Tendulkar finally fell into the trap laid
for him, why blame the fielding captain or the bowler?
Moreover, there is a grey area in Law 25 which deals with wide balls and
that is probably why umpires De Silva and Jayaprakash did not step in to
halt the tactics. From the bowler's point of view, he was bowling at the
rough to try and get the ball to turn and bounce and force the batsman
to make a false stroke and that by any yardstick, is a legitimate
tactic. And till the authorities change the law to make it clearly black
or white instead of grey, there is little the batsman can do unless he
can summon the courage and technical skill, as Virender Sehwag did for a
brief period, to plan a counter strategy that will force the fielding
captain to reassess his options.
Having pleaded my case even if judging by current reactions, I believe
I am in a minority I must now move on to the actual play at Bangalore
which, to be candid, was rendered fairly mundane largely by the
inclement weather. If anything, in the truncated play possible, England
proved that their improved performance at Ahmedabad was no fluke, that
they had the measure of the hotly fancied home team, and that if this
was a five match series, they would probably be favourites to win. Which
from their viewpoint is very encouraging considering that they came to
India without some key players and then after the first Test, lost the
services of their most accomplished batsman Graham Thorpe.
The batsmen had clearly learnt from their mistakes at Mohali and tackled
Kumble and Harbhajan with more than a degree of assurance. This is
driven home by the figures of the two spinners after the Mohali Test.
The bowlers, especially the medium-pacers, reveled in the helpful
conditions at Bangalore while Giles deserves praise just for his
dismissal of Tendulkar at Bangalore. James Foster's work, both behind
the stumps and in front of them, was exemplary. Overall, it was a
performance that will make the Englishmen enjoy their Christmas break
all the more and they will be longing to come back next month when they
would reasonably hope to take on India on level terms at least.
For India, it was a hollow victory at best. If anything, the series
showed that their image of tigers at home had taken a beating. They
finished second best in every department of the game, even in matters of
team selection. Given the conditions, Tinu Yohannan should have played
at Bangalore but the selectors inexplicably stuck to their defence
oriented seven batsmen policy. Not playing Yohannan was as faulty a
decision as not playing Sarandeep at Ahmedabad. It may be another home
series win but not one that will stay in memory for long.
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