Why India won't win in West Indies
Daniel Laidlaw
A tour of the West Indies is one of the most important on the cricket
calendar. Like trips to England, Australia or South Africa, a series in the
Caribbean is an opportunity for most teams to measure progress as they
attempt to topple a traditional power.
Despite West Indies having faded from a dominant force to young strugglers
over the last decade, with much said and written about their ills, they
still have a proud home record of being beaten just twice in the last 26
years, by Australia (1995) and South Africa (2001). Thus it is slightly
surprising that India, with a notorious away record of no series wins
outside the subcontinent since 1986, appear from reports to be considered
favourites and cautiously but confidently anticipating a series victory.
The confidence is not misplaced. Given form and comparative ability, India
*should* expect to win. Yet at the same time, this series is not appreciably
different to any other away from home in which India should have performed
in recent times but did not. On that basis, there is good reason to believe
that India will not win in the West Indies.
Firstly, West Indies are not quite as bad as one might think. Against
another dominant home team in Sri Lanka last November, West Indies were
whitewashed 3-0, but had encouraging performances by Ramnaresh Sarwan and
pushed every match into the fifth day. Against Pakistan in Sharjah, Carl
Hooper's young charges were again wiped 2-0, but crucially were without
Brian Lara. In that series, young all-rounder Ryan Hinds performed
creditably in his first two Tests.
So despite Viv Richards claiming West Indies are at their lowest point, they
appear to possess enough young talent, in addition to batting veterans Lara,
Hooper and Chanderpaul, to at least be competitive at home. It is a paucity
of proven fast bowlers which may be West Indies' weakest area, which is what
India will need to exploit.
The facts of the teams' respective records are well known. Though they've
been flogged away, in the past few years at home West Indies have beaten
Pakistan, Zimbabwe, England and drawn with Australia. In the past 12 months,
India have drawn in Zimbabwe and lost in Sri Lanka and South Africa. That is
not compelling evidence to suggest India will have an easy time of it,
however weak the opposition may be.
Even South Africa had some difficulty overcoming West Indies in the
Caribbean in 2000/'01, winning 2-1. If the pitches are as sluggish as they
were in that series, periods of high-scoring Indian dominance are likely to
be rare, making crease occupation a necessity. If India take West Indies
lightly, they will assuredly lose.
In a team lacking stars, West Indies depend on Brian Lara perhaps more than
India do Tendulkar, making the Prince's presence invaluable. He returns from
a broken arm against India and if he can replicate his pre-injury form,
taking 688 runs off a Sri Lankan attack featuring Muralitharan, then India's
fielders will be doing some leather chasing across the Caribbean. Harbhajan
Singh needs a strategy to combat him and if Lara wins that battle, West
Indies will at least be provided competitive scores.
Erapalli Prasanna was quoted as saying recently he would be surprised if
West Indies' present crop of bowlers can bowl India out twice, and it is
true the likes of Mervyn Dillon, Pedro Collins and Marlon Black should not
strike fear in India's batsmen. However, recent history has done little to
change the perception India's batting remains susceptible to collapse
against fast bowlers overseas, making large totals far from guaranteed,
whatever the make-up of the West Indian attack.
While India's batting has been prone to collapse, a lack of quality bowling
resources may also be hurtful. India's best chance of dismissing West Indies
for low scores lies with spin and Srinath, yet only two spinners have been
selected and one of them, Anil Kumble, takes his wickets at an average of
39.9 away from home. Zaheer Khan is yet to truly establish himself as
Srinath's partner, and a workhorse seam bowler who can bowl a lot of overs
at a good economy rate would be an asset to help Kumble and Harbhajan build
pressure. West Indies' batting can be fragile and most likely it will need
to be.
One interesting facet of the series will be how the West Indies quicks
approach bowling to Sourav Ganguly. Ganguly's Test batting is currently a
liability, averaging 27.73 since the start of 2001, and the West Indies
bowlers should attempt to exploit his perceived weakness outside off by
having him caught in slips or square of the wicket playing away from his
body. Conversely, if Ganguly can reverse his form, it would go some way
towards helping India to winning totals.
Obviously Tendulkar needs another productive series, but his returns should
be cancelled out by Lara in what will be a fascinating head-to-head duel, no
matter how much it is played down. At home, Lara would surely expect that
whatever Tendulkar can do, he can do it better. Tendulkar averages 62.81
against West Indies; Lara only 42.07 against India. If Lara conquered Murali
in Sri Lanka, what will he do to India at home? Those averages should only
draw closer.
A lack of a reliable opening pair and wicketkeeper shapes as India's other
impediment to securing a series victory. Excellent wicketkeeping can cover
for some deficiencies in batting ability, but not the other way around. The
Dasgupta dilemma needs a resolution, whatever it may be. Consistent starts
are always enormously beneficial, especially overseas, but one suspects the
Das/Dasgupta pairing is one West Indies would fancy breaking relatively
cheaply.
The fact that it's a five-Test series should not be under-estimated, either.
India have not played a series of more than three Tests since the last tour
of West Indies in 1997, and the extra mental and physical demands this makes
must be taken into account. Five Tests in little more than a month is a
strenuous assignment.
Hopefully, India will not under-estimate how difficult it still is to defeat
West Indies at home. In light of Viv Richards claim about the state of the
West Indian team, the thoughts of West Indian coach Roger Harper seem to
have been overlooked. Harper noted in a report recently that West Indies
tend to play to their full potential at home, the opposite of India away,
and that he expects his team to be "very, very competitive" against India.
An intense struggle looms.
Of course, there are also reasons why India should win in West Indies, such
as their improving if still under-achieving away form, and the fact that
West Indies are entering a home series without Courtney Walsh for the first
time. But as India again pursue an elusive away series victory, they cannot
be considered favourites. Beating West Indies at home would still be a
significant achievement.
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