African Safari: The tour diary
Ashish Shukla - 13 November 2001
Puddles of boredom form at East London
©AFP |
The Indian players are literally bored to death. They are waiting in
vain for the four-day match against South Africa 'A' to start after
the first two days were washed down the drain by the incessant rain.
Captain Sourav Ganguly is probably ruing the fact that he did not go
to Kolkata to be with his wife and new-born daughter after all, while
Connor Williams and Harbhajan Singh cannot wait to see some action.
Wicket-keeper Deep Dasgupta has borrowed a book on Edmund Hillary from
Rahul Dravid; by the looks of it, it must be inspiring stuff.
The Indians still routinely go to the ground, partly to have a feel of
the surroundings and partly to avail themselves of the lunch, which,
thoughtfully, is Indian in every sense of the word. The visiting
journalists too do not mind helping themselves to dishes that they are
so used to back home.
Even though there is no activity, the Indians are a bit edgy about the
three back-to-back Tests that they are being asked to play in the next
three weeks. After the two remaining Tests of the current tour, at
Port Elizabeth and Centurion Park, they will be heading straight for
Mohali in Chandigarh, where the first Test against England is
scheduled for December 3.
The team's genial manager, MK Bhargava, has his hands full with the
issue of sorting out travel arrangements for the players. It appears
that the Indians cannot get a flight back home before November 29, two
days after the Centurion Test ends. Thus, literally, the team will be
arriving at Mohali just hours before the first Test against England
gets underway. Even if he can book tickets on an Emirates flight for
some of the players hailing from the north, they will still reach home
only on the morning of the 30th because of the timing of the
connecting flight from Dubai to Delhi.
©AFP |
Bhargava's problems, thus, are echoed by the gloomy conditions at East
London. The rain-ruined game, which has kept the Indians hostage in
their hotel, is a missed opportunity for many of the players, in more
sense than one. Sachin Tendulkar, who has been joined by his wife and
two lovely kids, Javagal Srinath and Anil Kumble were in any case
going to sit out this four-day match. But Williams, Harbhajan and the
medium-pacers would have loved to stake their claims for Test berths,
while vice-captain Rahul Dravid could have obtained some valuable
practice at the very top of the order.
There seems to be little doubt at the moment that Dravid will be
opening the innings for the remaining Test matches. The middle-order
is overflowing with talent at this stage, and one of them has to move
up the order. Hence the choice of Dravid to shoulder the burden of an
opener.
©CricInfo |
The real mystery could lie in the choice of bowlers for the next Test.
If the wicket is grassy and seemingly quick, the Indians could be
forced to make a choice between the two regular spinners on this tour
- Harbhajan or Kumble. Kumble bowled for long hours - 50 overs in all
- during South Africa's mammoth first innings in the Bloemfontein
Test, but his returns were not quite encouraging. He did break through
with Gary Kirsten's wicket, but, by then, the hosts had already scored
almost 200 runs. Kumble's next success came in the form of Neil
McKenzie's wicket, when the score was well past 300.
It will, then, not be an easy choice for the Indians. To drop Kumble
when the bowling resources of the visitors are already paper-thin
might appear a blasphemy. But then, stranger things have happened in
Indian cricket. It is a situation that will be watched keenly by those
who are following the fortunes of this beleaguered team.
© Cricinfo