Archive for the ‘Cricket’ Category


 Goutham Chakravarthi

 29 July 2011


It is now a power struggle. It is proving to be one mighty battle for power between England and India: BCCI vs. ECB, English press vs. Indian press, ESPNStar com box vs. Sky com box. Of course, also the small matter of battle for ICC’s no.1 ranking in Tests.

Michael Vaughn wrote a piece on how to get Tendulkar out at the beginning of the series. Now, one Test into the series, Nasser Hussain has written a piece on how Anderson is proving to be too smart for Tendulkar. Simon Hughes wrote an article on how to get the better of all Indian players (bordering on something like get the batsmen out and don’t lose wickets to Indian bowlers!). Scyld Berry swears Tendulkar wouldn’t have crossed his highest score of 37 at Lord’s had he even batted the whole of the last day of the first Test. Boycott calls it the beginning of the end for the Indian team as no.1, but, Botham is already convinced that England are the new kings.

A story such as this is what media is after.

Not to be outdone, Sourav Ganguly called the English attack pretty much the same as the one he faced in 2007 and how India will tough it out and win this series. One Test in to the series, he is convinced that India will get better – a thought reflected in another former captain Anil Kumble’s recent article. Meanwhile, Sunil Gavaskar has appealed to the Indian media to get behind the home team like the Australian press and stop being negative about them (in other words, you or I can’t have an opinion of our own).

Long gone are the days when journalists described batting as art and poetry or the art of re-constructing a bowler’s clever plot in beguiling a champion opposition bowler. It is hyperbole madness today with media looking for quotes and stories. A Manjrekar calling Dravid “not talented” is a bigger story than a gutsy, carefully engineered Dravid hundred. A journalist who ekes out “Ganguly divides the team” from the coach is put on a higher pedestal than a wonderful analyst reporter who picks a pattern to a team’s issues with leg-spin bowling.

Bloggers and journalists have been working overtime to prove their points-of-view. Some English writers have even put this English team on par with Clive Lloyd’s West Indians and Steve Waugh’s Australians. The health of their bowling riches is compared to the ancient flourishing civilizations on the banks of river Nile and their seemingly endless supply of talented young batsmen are expected to back-fill any holes in their batting should there be such a need. Some credit the African and Asian immigrants’ contribution in the English uprising in the world rankings. The standard of county cricket is apparently on the rise while simultaneously they are taking a swipe at the state schools for not contributing even one English player since Collingwood.

On the Indian side, cricket enthusiasts have been digging-up stats of tours where India start poorly and stacking the series end result to be convinced that there is going to be a turn around. Health and injury history of Zaheer Khan have been researched more than will the protein pattern matching at the Indian Institute of Science. A team’s seriousness of the first test is being questioned and even alleged to be used as match practice by Sanjay Manjrekar. Never the ones to miss an opportunity, the whole of England is hell bent to point at the IPL for every Indian failure anywhere else – from the player fitness to mental fatigue.

The same can be extended to how both the cricket boards operate. Both like power and both don’t have a history of being very affable when wielding it. Like ECB’s willing and what proved to be a fatal association with Standford and now the enormous urge to protect its players from theIPL, BCCI is no different with wanting its stars playing in IPL – even at the cost of an international tour – and not the other T20 leagues around the world. Both like taking pot-shots at each other, don’t expect it to be very different should one of the two teams lose on the field either on a dodgy umpiring decision or the proverbial “player integrity” over a match altering low catch.

The team that stands tall at the end of the series will be regarded as among the finest by its fans, ex-players and its media while the losing team will face the wrath of their fans, ex-players and media. You see, they all need the men on the field to give them the bragging rights over their counterparts.

God save the team that wins. God save the team that loses.

Preview Trent Bridge: Perspective India

Posted: July 28, 2011 by The CouchExpert in Cricket, India in England 2011

 Goutham Chakravarthi

 28 July 2011


Zaheer Khan was always going to miss this Test. He would be lucky to be match-fit even for the third Test. It was obvious. But in today’s age, playing the cards close to the chest is the norm. That a press release from the team management said he might bowl in the second innings of the Lord’s test was a testament to it. In Zaheer’s absence and with Gautam Gambhir also likely to sit out, Trent Bridge will confirm if India are on the way down from the lofty standards they have set for themselves over the last three years.

If the English press are to be believed, TrentBridge will snake and spit on the batsmen. Anderson has a Sydney Barnes-esque track record there and even with Tremlett out, Bresnan is expected to bend the ball later than Schumacher would on a chicane bend, and at pace to expose the visiting batsmen. Indians are expected to wind-up in a corner and wave the white flag.

India will rely on their famed middle-order to put big runs on the board

In the wake of a troubled hour such as this, India will call on their most seasoned and the best of their batsmen to stand-up for their team. In style and craft there cannot have been many better than their middle-order champions. With individuality they have been original and have been proven  to be men of substance. May be a Jack Hobbs from yester year would relish the challenge of facing a menacing attack on a spiteful pitch with masterful footwork, judgment of a sage and strokes of an artist. In Tendulkar, Dravid and Laxman India will believe they have the men to stand-up to the very fine English attack’s precision, strength and discipline like Hobbs did. In short, expect the ageing, but sagacious Indian middle-order to put their chests out and fight the most complete bowling side in these conditions.

Not that India hasn’t been found wanting early in the series newly. 1-0 down in Sri Lanka last year, India went in to the final Test without Zaheer and Harbhajan. They won. As a team, they have surpassed the sum of their individual parts often over the last three years. In a strange Laxmanesque way, they have delivered with their backs to the wall. Perth and Durban are recent memories and India will want to refresh them with a performance they can be proud of. They won the last test they played at Trent Bridge, albeit Zaheer Khan and RP Singh will not be around this time. India will know that they can bowl England out twice in these conditions and that gives them a chance of scoring more runs than England to win the test.

If India shed their early season skin and snake their way to play some good cricket, we could still be in for Diwali-lit-night-sky-like English summer. At the end of this Test it remains to be seen if India can show they are good enough to retain the Himalayan peak or if England will hoist their flag and send India tumbling down.

Preview Trent Bridge: Perspective England

Posted: July 28, 2011 by thecognitivenomad in Cricket, India in England 2011

Chandrasekhar Jayarama Krishnan

Head of Cricket, CouchExpert

28 July 2011


In the good old days of the last decade, in an era prior to the belittlement of Australian cricket, as compared to that of their Ashes counterparts, the issues relating to English cricket were primarily rutted during an attempt to stabilize a solid unit. Barring the Ashes triumph in 2005, there was hardly a period that English cricket went through to demonstrate enough consistency for adding armoury to their intent in fighting for the one among the top 3 spots in the ICC test rankings.

With changes in structure seeming imperative back then, much has changed in English cricket – a stark reaction perceived by many, to years of floating in mediocrity. An Ashes triumph down under, followed by a comprehensive victory over the current Test Number One at the Lord’s earlier this week has given the British media plenty to rave over these days.

England is a nation that has suffered from constant media glare – and they also survive because of it. Just a few months ago, KP’s decision to pull out of the World Cup squad appeared to make every choice of his agonizingly controversial. Today, after his Man-of-the-Match performance at the Lord’s, the papers have gone nowhere short of eulogizing their ‘countryman’. The media has additionally done a great deal to ensure that the morale in the English camp is significantly higher than that in the Indian dressing room.

The second test at Trent Bridge, a venue that is most likely the one that matches to the home team’s bowling strengths in terms of conditions in offer, will only be England’s to lose. Along with morale, the home team carries a lot of form, especially in the bowling and the lower order batting departments –areas that the visitors have simply failed to showcase with conviction. The absence of Sehwag has done England a world of good, but from a rankings perspective, the top test team should have had better answers for the questions posed by the English seamers.

There have been a few reports on the loose mentioning Chris Tremlett’s injury issue with a hamstring. In any case, an able replacement in the form of Tim Bresnan, who is no joker with the bat, and one with the qualities to exploit the conditions that Trent Bridge offers, would hardly disfigure the current England setup.

With doubts lingering over Tremlett's hamstring, the only change envisioned is Bresnan slotting in for him on Friday

England’s other weapon, which did not go unnoticed, has been the form of its wicket-keeper batsman Matt Prior. At number 7, in addition to his brilliant keeping abilities, Prior’s contribution with the bat has stretched that gap between the home team and the visitors. A gothic journey, through the unpartisan excesses of media and ‘experts’ glare, a keeper who was termed “rubbish” has gone a long way in to proving his detractors wrong. In Prior’s case, especially, the course was particularly torturous.

Given that the Lord’s win has aroused almost every special interest extant in England, the onus on the likes of Strauss & Cook to perform will be higher than it was before, primarily to avoid an unseemly spectacle under the best of circumstances. With the exception of the doubt lingering around Tremlett’s fitness, England will pretty much look to play an unchanged squad and target an undefeatable 2-0 lead this series.

Broad and Anderson will have plenty to look forward to.

An Expected Disaster

Posted: July 27, 2011 by Prasad Moyarath in Cricket, India in England 2011

 Prasad Moyarath

 27 July 2011


The inevitable has happened. A fervent Indian supporter might be shocked but for a cricket connoisseur, the Indian loss in the first test at Lords was not unexpected. Though the figures rank India as the No.1 test team in the world, a comparison of this Indian team with strong test teams of the past like the West Indies under Clive Lloyd and Viv Richards and Australia under Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting will make anyone doubt the current system of test ranking and the standard of test cricket.

By ignoring youngsters like Kohli, the selectors have turned a blind eye towards the future

An England tour was always looked upon by all Indian cricket enthusiasts with great hope considering the testing conditions for both batsmen and bowlers. Players also considered England as a place to showcase their mettle as it provided ultimate test to their abilities as a player. Rahul Dravid and Saurav Ganguly cemented their places in Indian team after spectacular performances in one such England tour. But the current England tour looks completely different. BCCI which manages cricket in India with a monetary vision never seemed to understand the importance of test cricket or a need to groom a future test team while their selectors selected the team for the series. Gautam Gambhir, Virender Sehwag, Zaheer Khan, Sreesanth and Munaf Patel coming back from injuries were included in the test squad for the series without any match practice with all the above mentioned with the exception of Sehwag available for selection for the first test. Wriddhiman Saha was included as a reserve wicket keeper replacing Parthiv Patel to maintain the BCCI’s age old tradition of musical chair for reserve players there by losing a reserve opener with proven ability in English conditions. BCCI never bothered to include any of the youngsters like Virat Kohli, Ashwin or Umesh Yadav in the team with future in mind. India paid a very heavy price for this lackluster attitude of the BCCI by losing Zaheer Khan on the first day of the Lords test.

Captaincy of Dhoni has been debatable for a long time despite the World Cup victory. His defensive tactics have always helped the opposition in winning moral victories in test matches and this was very evident in the last test against West Indies. His lack of confidence in the World’s best batting line up including himself was exposed when he decided to bowl first after winning the toss there by awarding a moral victory to England even before the start. Though many supported Dhoni’s decision considering the cloudy conditions that prevailed at Lords in the first day morning, the decision raised the eyebrows of all those who watched the Lord’s test in 1990 when Azharuddin committed the same mistake and the Leeds test in 2002 when Saurav Ganguly bravely opted to bat. India lost the Lord’s test in 1990 after Gooch scored 333 and India won the Leeds test after Sanjay Bangar and Rahul Dravid batted bravely in the swinging conditions sharing a 170 run second wicket partnership. The Indian management including the former England coach Fletcher seemed to ignore the history and batting conditions in England.

Dhoni’s post match comment blaming the change of batting order in the second innings and variable bounce for the loss was never befitting the No.1 team. India could not bowl out England in both the innings and our experienced batsmen never applied themselves. This loss clearly exposed the lack of preparation which was never expected. The Indian cricket team selection should be free from the clutches of sponsors and the BCCI should field players who play for the country over the ones who earn for the sponsors. In a country where the cricket’s governing body is more interested in IPL matches that fill their coffers more than international matches and where the media boast every match as an event for Tendulkar’s next world record, this loss in a historical test match will go down as yet another forgotten piece of history.


 Srikrishnan Chandrasekaran

 26 July 2011



Once again on a last day of a batting-friendly pitch Indian batsmen failed to put up a fight. All the top order batsmen played very silly shots and threw away their wickets. Dravid knew the first session was crucial and has failed in other test matches like this in earlier years too. He would have tried out an option of retiring hurt for an hour or so and came back to bat again from second session. After being well set, losing wickets on a final morning is really losing the test match. D & L clearly knew Gambhir and Sachin can’t bat for a long and they would have played much better cricket than what they actually did.
Even though we have got strong batting line up, it might have been a better practice to deploy a bowler to play after the fall of Dravid’s wicket in the first session as the first session on final day is very crucial.

Dhoni had to bowl himself with India a bowler short.

Raina played a very good innings but there has been not much support from the other end. Bhajji as usual at a crucial time of the match played a rubbish cricket shot to throw his wicket. It is not ideal to expect a bowler to play decent cricket, but can try not to play some loose shots to throw their wickets. No words about Dhoni, time and again he is proving that he is not even an average batsman in test cricket. Even in our last tour to WI, he didn’t score much runs against a lesser attack. Few years back, he averaged over 50 in test cricket and today it is 32. It clearly shows how much contribution (or the lack of it) he is making for the team match after match, series after series.

India need to really work hard in next few days and come up with a fresh mind to compete well this tour. Indian selectors should consider basic changes. They should think from a basic standpoint and need to make the following changes which will really help India to fight back:

  • Bhajji with Amit Mishra / Ashwin (Probably Bhajji can retire from test cricket, since he is good only on spinning tracks and not on other ones)
  • Zaheer with Munaf Patel  If he is not fit then bring Sreesanth (Sreesanth has got pace, line and length, but problem is consistency, field behavior and long spells. On other hand, Patel is slow medium bowler and it is difficult on England conditions but very effective as he put the batsmen to play at least 4 out of 6 balls which really makes huge difference in test cricket)
  • Dhoni with Yuvaraj Singh (Since Dhoni has not done much with bat / keeping / captaincy over the last few years in test cricket. Just for the sake of attending the toss, press interview, these things he can do without playing the match also)

Even as an Indian, in one way am feeling happy with result of first test match, otherwise the whole world would still believe Dhoni is a good test cricket captain too. He still has the excuse to say some players got injured and we have played in a different batting order / umpiring decision against us etc.., so couldn’t win the test match. Dhoni’s inner stuff will tell clearly that he lacks the basics of captaincy.

There is no need of blaming the umpire when we play a match, since it is regularly happening over the last 2 decades in every match for us. We missed several chances and those were very costly.

England might be dreaming that they are No 1 etc.. and even their senior retired folks will be day dreaming that they are the best test team. The headlines talk about Indian batsmen playing some loose shots to throw their wickets which shows that they haven’t got the wickets through their real bowling class. The bottom line is their bowlers are clearly not up to the mark for a test match against India. This is really the true side of England team, so this is an advantage for us to be positive and look for a better display on the next test match.
Few positives out of this match for both teams:

Positives: England

· Broad finding his form both with ball and bat
· KP’s turnaround with a double hundred
· Prior with a century
· Anderson with a five-wicket haul

Positives: India

· Mukund got off a good start in both innings which will give him and the team lot of confidence in the coming up matches even if Sehwag isn’t fit
· Rahul, Laxman played some good innings
· Raina played a fighting innings, deserved for a century but missed it
· Praveen & Ishant bowled some good spells