Issues of distraction
Daniel Laidlaw
It’s obvious now: Omitting Connor Williams was a mistake. What was India
thinking opening with a makeshift batsman in South Africa? If Williams had
played, India could have had a better start, and the debacle that followed
would have been avoided.
Clearly, playing Agarkar was also a selection error. Why pick someone so
erratic when the consistent and experienced Prasad was available? He
always
provides good support for Srinath.
The majority of the blame for the top order failure in the first innings
and
events of the second Test must therefore be attributed to selection.
Right?
No. If only it was that simple.
In reality, second-guessing selection and debating who should play instead
of whom is worthwhile only up to a point. Ultimately, the right team is
the
winning team, and winning depends more on the players selected performing
to
the required standard rather than who is selected. Play well and win and
selection becomes a peripheral issue, which is exactly what it should be
for
a successful team.
At the moment, it appears from the outside that India have become so
obsessed with the line-up and composition of the team -- as have the
experts -- that they have seemingly forgotten it’s the process, not the
personnel, which is fundamental to success. Against a quality opponent in
South Africa, India have not had the luxury of anguishing over who should
be
playing. Albeit hindered by a lack of any first-class preparation outside
the Tests, the players selected have had to perform, regardless of
position,
and thus far it has failed to happen. It would be ludicrous to attribute
what has occurred in one and a half Tests to selection.
The main contention has revolved around who should open with Das. This
might
be ignorant, but secretly I’m beginning to think the unique attributes
required to open are over-emphasised. The only discernable differences
between opening and playing anywhere else in the top six are attitudinal,
temperamental and psychological.
Certainly, one would think all specialist Test batsmen should have the
technique, as even middle order batsmen have to contend with the second
new
ball and pitches that become enlivened after rain. Australia’s Justin
Langer, as one recent example, is often unconvincing but has scored two
hundreds in his last two innings as an opener seemingly on willpower.
Rahul
Dravid on the other hand, although in a different situation in that he was
already an established player within the team, might have convinced
himself
after two innings that he is not capable of it, when logic suggests the
difference between opening and coming in at first drop after a handful of
overs is minimal. At 3/15, makeshift opener Dasgupta was still batting, so
in reality the debate was redundant.
Rightly or wrongly, in the second Test India has given the impression of
an
unsettled team in a state of confusion, the antithesis of what it should
be
on a demanding tour when unity and clarity of purpose is paramount.
Selection issues undoubtedly have failed to help matters, but the team
objectives should have made that relatively irrelevant.
This would appear to be the fault of Wright and Ganguly, who could have
simply declared one player would open throughout the series and that the
situation would be reviewed thereafter, with the chosen middle order
batsmen, if that was who was selected, not to be held accountable for any
failure while batting out of position. The public prevarication cannot
have
helped clear the sense of confusion, although hopefully it has not been as
much of a distraction as it has appeared from the outside.
The main focus should be on the performance of the incumbents,
irrespective
of position. India’s batting frailties away from home were exposed for thesecond time in as many innings by Shaun Pollock. A bad decision was
followed
by diffident efforts, alarmingly poor shot selection and general
self-destruction through an inability to ride through adversity.
Previously,
there had been the suspicion that some Indian batsmen did not have the
technique to cope with faster pitches that favoured seam bowlers. With the
possible exception of Ganguly, that is no longer the case. If the failures
of the last two innings can be attributed to one single factor, it’s
temperament – and Pollock.
Like Srinath in South Africa’s first innings, Shaun Pollock has been
masterful. It has still required bowling of the highest calibre to topple
the Indian upper order and Pollock, with his relentlessly demanding line
and
length, has provided it. The pacier Hayward and Ntini have been a distant
second to their captain in terms of consistently testing the batsmen. Like
McGrath, it is easy to under-rate Pollock because he is not necessarily a
spectacularly eye-catching bowler, but he does enough with the ball from
close to the stumps to be spectacularly effective.
Even taking into account Pollock’s ability, the downfall of Dravid was
surprising. For one of the world’s best technicians, Dravid has been the
batting disappointment of the series to date, failing to move his feet
sufficiently to the delivery which bowled him. Earlier, he had
calamitously
dropped a simple catch off Boucher, but it would be extraordinary
unprofessional if that unfortunate error played any role in his dismissal.
In a failed first innings that will probably decide the second Test and
with
it the series, the approach of VVS Laxman was nevertheless encouraging.
Rarely does batting appear to come as naturally as it does to Laxman. Even
Tendulkar, for all his talent, seems expertly refined and fiercely
diligent.
Laxman, though, seems like he has batted the same way all his life and as
a
consequence his temperament cost him in the first Test.
Laxman’s confidence has been so high that he has sought to dominate the
bowling, only to be shocked when a loose edge goes to hand. It has been
impossible to criticise, however, because the method of his demise has
also
been the reason for his success. Happily, he appeared to slightly modify
that approach in the first innings, willing to trade off the more sublime
but inherently risky shots for a tighter technique and longer innings. As
a
Test batsman, he is still very much a work in progress.
Now, if only Ramesh returned to open the batting...
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