Records no help in final
Daniel Laidlaw
Prem posed the question at the end of his last match report, after
Tendulkar and Ganguly had set a new world record for the first wicket in India's
thumping of Kenya, why a team with so many individual records to celebrate
does not rank with the top few teams in the world. It's an intriguing
question that must vex everyone with an interest in Indian cricket.
Tendulkar and Ganguly had just set a new world record, yet I fully
expected South Africa to defeat India in the final regardless. Why?
First of all, they are clearly India's two best ODI players, on whom the
team's fortunes unhealthily hinge. Get one out early, and India's batting
potency is vastly reduced. Get both, and the opposition knows the most
difficult part of the match has already been won.
At 2/31 in the 12th over, one wondered whether the final was effectively
over. Dravid was capable of holding the innings together, but did not
threaten to single-handedly resurrect it. After Sehwag, the rest did not
inspire any belief that they could transform the innings. Two overs into
South Africa's innings the result was obvious and another final had been
lost. Individual records were of no assistance and nowhere to be found.
Secondly, individual statistics are relevant to a team's performance only
in an academic sense. It's fun to leisurely leaf through the stats book or
look up records online, and if you're like me it's always exciting to see a
world
record fall. But individual records don't usually measure or define
winning
teams. Remember, it wasn't just Bradman who was dubbed Invincible in 1948.
He needed his team-mates too. In terms of consistently winning matches,
records are meaningless, as India has found. What's the point of being
able
to beat Kenya by a record margin if you can't match South Africa?
Tendulkar and Ganguly are probably the best opening pair in ODI history
and
nothing should detract from that. But from a team point of view, their
records have little significance if they don't contribute to victories in
the important matches.
India's opening pair is simply a leading example of the overall
irrelevance
of statistics, though, and should not be singled out. It would be
ridiculously unfair to blame only the best players for India's failure to
win finals, since over-reliance on them is the very problem.
The best teams in any sport are usually known for rising to the occasion
when it matters most, not for what they do in the preliminary stages of
competition. It's the same for individual players. Some are capable of
looking brilliant, world-class performers at lower levels of the game, but
are surprisingly exposed at the elite level. Prolific first-class batsman
Graeme Hick is one example, and one-day master Michael Bevan is another.
Both have impressive records but have been proven flawed at the highest
level. Team India seems to suffer from the same problem.
I read with a little scepticism comments like "if only our players had the
right attitude" and "if only the team had more discipline," or "if India
just played with more consistency..." and "we have the most talent, but we
don't play like a team" and so on.
Well, if a team had talent, consistency, discipline and a professional
attitude then of course it would be amongst the best! It would look like
South Africa. Teams like South Africa and Australia also possess some
wonderful talent, it just doesn't always manifest itself as much
individually because of the collective strength of the team.
There is no simple solution that is going to magically help India join or
replace that pair. South Africa and Australia enjoy the success they
currently do because they have worked hard, embodied the above qualities
and
planned for it. It did not happen by accident.
In the Indian one-day team, the opposition sees Tendulkar, Ganguly, Dravid
and then a collection of average batsmen who might be dangerous if
provided
freedom to dictate but who are otherwise not expected to be a credible
threat. In Sodhi, Sehwag and Yuvraj it is fair to say India has three
batsmen yet to reveal their full potential so any criticism must be
tempered, but the final did offer an opportunity for any one of them to
make
a statement and none took it. Sehwag must be especially disappointed
because
he had found a groove with Dravid and was helping build a competitive
total
when he gave it away.
Rightly or wrongly, India gives the impression of a front-runner - a team
of
undoubted potential, which looks like a spectacular world beater when
playing weaker opposition or in a comfortable environment, but is
nevertheless questionable in big matches or when placed under undue
pressure.
That still does not explain why it is found wanting, which may be an even
harsher reality. If a team that is so ostensibly talented continually
fails
to perform when it counts, then you have to wonder whether a re-evaluation
of that talent is required. Maybe India is an over-achiever and not an
under-achiever - a team that can occasionally produce superlative
displays,
but too often reverts to mediocrity.
In short, it could be that India as a one-day team is slightly over-rated
by
supporters desperate to see it do well, which leads to expectations higher
than deserved given its record. It's one theory, anyway.
India's tour of South Africa: Complete coverage
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