Promise of youth could propel another title tilt

ESPNcricinfo previews Somerset’s prospects for the 2017 season

George Dobell03-Apr-2017Last season:

In: Steven Davies (Surrey), George Bartlett, Ben Green
Out: Chris Rogers (retired), Alex Barrow (released)
Overseas: Dean Elgar (SA)2016 in a nutshell
Mixed. They came tantalisingly close to that much-anticipated first Championship title – they eventually fell four points short of Middlesex after what some viewed as a controversial run-chase in the final match against Yorkshire at Lord’s – and enjoyed a good run to the semi-final stage of the Royal London Cup. But they won fewer games than any other side in the NatWest Blast and saw the progress of some of their highly-talented young players – particularly Jamie Overton who, to be fair, was good before a back problem laid him low, and Tom Abell – stall just a little due to injury and loss of form. That they enjoyed such a successful Championship season was, to a large part, a reflection of the ability of their spinners to exploit helpful Taunton surfaces (four of their six of their wins were at home; they also enjoyed a notable one in Leeds) and some heavy run-scoring from two of the finest batsmen the club has ever produced: Marcus Trescothick and James Hildreth. Peter Trego and Chris Rogers also made 1,000 runs in the Championship season. Most of all, though, it was about Jack Leach claiming 65 Division One wickets – only Jeetan Patel took more – and helping Somerset recover from a start in which they won only one of their first nine games (and that by one wicket after the last three batsmen, one of which was Leach, added 64 for victory) to a breathlessly tight finish to the season. There were few, if any, grumbles about his action at the time, so it was quite a shock when it was found to be illegal during ECB testing at the end of the season.2017 prospects
There’s no reason Somerset shouldn’t challenge again. While Chris Rogers has retired, Dean Elgar replaces him at the top of the order and will open with Trescothick. Abell may benefit from a move down to No.3 and Steven Davies, recruited from Surrey, will fill the No. 5 position – a problem in 2016 – and keep wicket at the start of the Championship season, at least. Ryan Davies is likely to gain keeping opportunities at some stage, though. With the Overtons, Lewis Gregory, Leach et al, they have a nicely balanced (and locally developed) attack, with Jim Allenby and Peter Trego adding all-round depth. T20 overseas signings are likely to follow, but there no reason Somerset shouldn’t improve sharply in that format with Steven Davies moving up the order in the white-ball formats. It is anticipated that Taunton’s wickets may well again provide some assistance to spinners but, after years when the county ground was a bowlers’ nightmare (and bearing in mind England’s record in turning conditions) that may well be no bad thing.In charge
The promotion of Tom Abell to captaincy in the Championship is something of a risk. While there’s no doubting his talent, his returns in 2016 – he averaged 25.61 in the Championship, finding some form in the latter part of the season – suggest he is still in the developmental stage of his career. Aged 23, why wouldn’t he be? So the added responsibility may be the making of him, or it could be a burden he could do without. Either way, it was a bold move to give him the leadership at such a young age. Matthew Maynard remains as the coach, with Rogers back in a role as batting coach until the end of June. Allenby continues as limited-overs captain, with Jason Kerr as assistant coach and bowling coach.Key player
When Leach struggled on the Lions tour – he was left out of the first unofficial Test in Sri Lanka and proved expensive in the second – it was feared that he may be having difficulty adjusting to his remodelled action. Evidence since, such as in pre-season games in the UAE, suggests he is growing more comfortable with it, but whether he has fully recovered remains to be seen. As the man who gave Somerset their attacking edge in 2016, his success may go some way to defining their season.Bright young thing
There’s quite a choice in this category for Somerset. Abell, aged 23, is a fine, locally developed player and George Bartlett, just 19 and good enough to score 179 in the recent Under-19 Test in Nagpur, may follow him into the side soon. Dominic Bess, the teenage offspinner who took his 13 Championship wickets at a cost of 10.46 apiece, is promising, while Craig Overton already looks a terrific allround cricketer who, aged 22, is pretty much a senior player. But it remains his brother Jamie who has the higher ceiling as a cricketer. Capable of bowling with the pace required for Test level, he also has ability with the bat and in the field. If he can retain his fitness – and he is understood to have had an encouraging winter on that score – he is really is the sort of player who could make a difference in an away Ashes series.ESPNcricinfo verdict
There’s quite a lot going right at Taunton at present. The club is developing (with significant help from Devon) good young players who promise to support the more experienced spine of Trescothick, Trego and Hildreth (all of whom can again be claimed as local) in competitive campaigns across all formats. Yes, there is support from some South African-born players, but Somerset is proof that a smaller ground can produce players, compete and sustain itself financially. Somerset also host a T20I between England and South Africa (June 23) and expect to sell out their Blast tickets. Many clubs could learn from their example.Bet365 odds: Specsavers Championship: 8-1; NatWest Blast 12-1; Royal London Cup 12-1

Nine hours of captain Chandimal

This wasn’t a madcap dash like his 169-ball 162 in Galle two years ago. It was, instead, a quiet epic, the innings of an extravagantly gifted batsman adapting to leadership

Osman Samiuddin in Abu Dhabi29-Sep-2017It’s cruel, it really is. It’s cruel for everyone else of their breed that they make it look so easy, that they swan in like this is exactly what they’re supposed to do in this position and then they do it like it’s no big thing. And not just like it’s no big thing, but that it’s a tiny thing and maybe the easiest of all things they’ll do in a given day.The pre-eminent batsmen of this age happen also to be captains of their sides. Whatever their merits as captain, look at the batsmen they are as captain. Virat Kohli averages 59.53 as captain, and 41.13 otherwise. Kane Williamson averages 59.94 as captain, and 49.23 otherwise. Joe Root, small as his sample is, averages 60.75 as captain, 52.80 otherwise. Steven Smith averages 69.02 as captain, 51.83 otherwise.They haven’t broken a collective bead of sweat between themselves in doing so either. It’s superhuman and insane. If anything they’ve become, by numbers, better batsmen and in presence too they’ve grown. Which, if you think about it, goes against the very grain of human experience – normally the more pressure you apply upon humans, the more you begin to see what fragile constructions we are. It is not supposed to be easy, to be captain and to be the best batsman you can be. It’s not mutually exclusive, but it takes some doing to be as good as a batsman as you were before captaincy, or even just the same kind of batsman.It would only be natural, actually, for something to give way as a batsman when you take on the burdens of captaincy; not necessarily performance, but some little essence of what makes a batsman. Maybe a particular shot is put away. Maybe an innings just begins to creak a little under the weight of the role. In every single Misbah innings, as a recent example, it was clear that nearly every decision he made as a batsman, every shot he played, came only after he had weighed up every single beneficial or deleterious side effect on his captaincy and that in the shadow of so many shots Misbah did play was hidden a Misbah who wasn’t captain who would’ve played that shot differently.Smith, Kohli, Williamson and Root, by contrast, wear their captaincy so lightly on the batting crease, they hardly look like they’re playing competitive cricket, let alone leading their countries.Which brings us to Dinesh Chandimal and his quietly epic, nine-hour-long and unbeaten 155, a vivid illustration of what captaincy can – and by rights, should – do to most batsmen; which is, take a difficult, fraught task and add a level of neurosis to it. If you haven’t followed Chandimal’s career as closely as that of the big four, you might still remember him as one of a number of young and audacious batsmen who emerged in the subcontinent across the latter years of the aughts. Once upon a time, Sri Lanka had Dinesh Chandimal, because Pakistan had Umar Akmal and India had Kohli, and we had a golden age ahead of us.It didn’t work out that way but most likely, if you’re asked, you’ll recall Chandimal’s 169-ball 162 against India a couple of years ago, a very different kind of epic and among the most memorable Test innings of recent years.This is what you will definitely not recall from his innings spread over Thursday and Friday: that it took him 15 balls to get off the mark; that he got to double figures off his 52nd ball, that he was on 35 off 100 and then, surely set at that stage, still took 37 balls over his next three runs; that he ended yesterday 60 off 184 and it took him 273 balls and nearly six-and-a-half hours to get to his hundred. Not until deep into his innings today could anyone have been able to recall a shot of his, and when it did come it was something – a drive, on the up, wide of mid-off off Hasan Ali. A while later, a more expansive cover drive brought up the hundred, a release in so many ways.Out of character? Maybe, though more like outside your expectations of him. Earlier this year he made 5 off 54 balls against Bangladesh (though he did make 50 off 75 in the second innings). A year ago he took nearly eight hours to make 132 against Australia. So if you thought he’d be that modern, all-shots attacker who only knows one mode, then no, clearly he isn’t.He isn’t the rule and neither is he the exception, because there are others around who can scale back and grind one out. What this was for sure was a reminder that being a captain and extravagantly gifted batsman is not as easy as we have come to believe.”Chandi is a leader,” said his coach Nic Pothas and words can sound cheap, but these couldn’t but help to have acquired some value in the aftermath of his innings. “He expects high standards from the team whether it is preparation or fielding or fitness. He sets a great example. We have worked on a few things on his batting and he is very happy that those things have come good. That was a great Test match innings.”The mark of a great batsman, Pothas added, is that they can adapt. Usually we take this to apply to conditions, or surfaces, or certain situations within a game. Not often enough anymore do we recognise that it means adapting to leadership itself.

Putting the wood on 'em

Quinton de Kock and Vernon Philander visit a Gunn & Moore factory in Nottingham to find out just how their bats are made

Firdose Moonda13-Jul-2017Quinton de Kock suspected there was “a lot of hard work” that went into making the bats he uses. On Wednesday, he found out exactly how much.The trees are grown by a merchant in Essex, their trunks hand-split with a beedle and axe into clefts and then left out in a yard for up to three months to dry. Then, they are dehumidified so the moisture levels reduce from 60% to 14%. From there, the willow is sawn into blades, pressed with two different machines and finished by shaping, sanding, polishing, adding a handle and knocking it in.When that bat is delivered to de Kock, he sees it for exactly what it is. “A bat’s a bat, wood’s wood; it doesn’t really matter. For me, it’s like that,” de Kock says during a visit to the Gunn & Moore factory in Nottingham. “I’m not really one to be bothered about it. I take the bats that I have. If I need to fix it to my personal comfort I will do that. Otherwise, I am not picky at all. I take the bat that’s been given to me and that’s what it is.”Having started his career with the reputation of being a reckless and rebellious wunderkind – an image earned more because of the kinds of shots he plays than his demeanour – de Kock is serious about saving his sponsors from over-expenditure. “When I started playing professionally, I didn’t used to look after my bats as much,” he says. “I went through eight or ten a year but I am slowly getting better. Last year I used six or seven and I am on my third this year. I try to keep it to as few as I can.”

“A bat’s a bat, wood’s wood; it doesn’t really matter. For me, its like that”Quinton de Kock

So has de Kock become an environmentalist, an advocate of sustainable living, or is he just superstitious? “I have a theory that if I look after my sponsor, they will look after me. With pads, I try and use one set of pads through as many years as I can, even though I know they always want me to use the new shapes and colours. I try and do what I can to look after the bats, especially.”If his bat suffers a small chip, de Kock mends it himself, otherwise he sends it to the factory for repair, preferring them to fix it rather than replace it. He also does some of his own maintenance work. “The only thing I believe in is oil. I believe that makes the bat better,” he says. “I am not worried about grains or different kinds of wood – wood’s wood. I think the oil makes it last longer and just makes it better.”

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Vernon Philander takes an almost entirely different approach to his bats. “It’s a bit like picking up a golf glove – there is something you really like about it and then that’s the one you want,” he says. “You’ve got to have something you are comfortable with, that will be suitable to your game.”In a 45-minute window, Philander had two new bats made. Generally, he likes to have different bats for different conditions. “For the subcontinent, I like bats with a lower sweet spot because the balls don’t bounce as much. In South Africa, New Zealand, England and Australia, which are more or less the same, I have a higher sweet spot.”Before you snigger at Philander’s fussiness, consider that he bats at No. 8 at has six Test fifties to his name, including two at Lord’s. Before making his first international appearance in 2007, he was considered a genuine allrounder and the runs he has scored for South Africa have saved their blushes on several occasions. He has many more in his sights too. “My batting was always something that I’ve taken great pride in, and maybe sometimes I’ve neglected it a little bit. Hopefully that first hundred is around the corner.”

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On the corner of Trent Lane and Little Tennis Road sits the only large-scale bat-making factory in the UK – Gunn & Moore. It is a 60-person operation, where one man, Kevin Stimpson, has worked for 43 years. Stimpson’s job is that of finisher and he takes immense pride in putting the final touches on the bats used by the likes of Marcus Trescothick, Michael Vaughan and an unnamed Indian batsman who wanted a quarter of an ounce removed from his bat with sandpaper.

“It’s a bit like picking up a golf glove – there is something you really like about [a bat] and then that’s the one you want”Vernon Philander

Older than him are the two presses. One was acquired by William Gunn in 1885 as his first investment and the second has been working since 1947. They are the machines that make the magic happen. In the five or so millimetres of willow that are compacted, the bats get their power and spring. Gunn & Moore have tried to get students from a local university to design one machine that can do the work of both presses, as together they are becoming fairly labour-intensive, but they were unable to figure out exactly how much pressure these venerable pieces of equipment apply. Instead, these presses are maintained and parts replaced regularly so they can keep going.Sustainability is going to become a hot topic in cricket, especially as awareness grows. It takes 20 years for a willow tree to grow to the extent that it can be used to make bats, though it can be done in 15. English willow is the preferred choice for them because the Kashmir willow is denser. “It’s therefore heavier and, because it has two growing seasons, it has a wide grain and a narrow grain, so it’s inconsistent,” Peter Wright, the MD of Gunn & Moore explains. “They have to press quite hard to make sure the wider bit is pressed enough. The dense wood becomes even denser.” And most batsmen prefer lighter, narrower grains that have as much power.That’s why the art of bat-making will continue on as big a scale as possible in England. To make sure they have artisans who can keep the factory going, Gunn & Moore have interns working with their more experienced people in the hope that there will be a transfer of skills. De Kock and Philander will be two of the many bat users pleased with that.

'The time was right to give Dutch cricket another go'

In the World Cricket League Championship, Ryan ten Doeschate may play a role in changing Netherlands’ cricket forever

Tim Wigmore24-Nov-2017Ryan ten Doeschate is 37. He continues to enjoy a storied career playing in T20 leagues around the world. And he has just led Essex to their first County Championship title in 25 years.The attraction of playing two 50-over matches against Namibia in Dubai is, perhaps, not immediately obvious. Yet, a few weeks ago, ten Doeschate texted Ryan Campbell, Netherlands’ coach, declaring that he was “keen and ready”. And so, after almost seven years, ten Doeschate will return to the Dutch team, for their final two World Cricket League Championship matches on December 6 and 8.”I understand the importance of these two matches for Dutch cricket and I thought the time was right to give it another go,” he explains.A pair of victories will guarantee Netherlands a place in the new 13-team ODI league, beginning in 2020. The matches loom as among the most important in any nation’s cricket history, offering a chance to put Netherlands on a new path from which they might never look back. Campbell says that the opportunities provided by inclusion in the new ODI league are “something all Associate countries have dreamt about for a long time”.The cancellation of the Global Twenty20 league in South Africa, which ten Doeschate was slated to play in, means that he is available for Netherlands once again. “It’s actually more by chance and my schedule allowing it. I feel like a two-month break has been long enough and I was ready for a new challenge.”Ten Doeschate’s return invites the question of why he has not played since the 2011 World Cup, when he hit brilliant centuries against England and Ireland, albeit both in agonising Dutch defeats. The most obvious answer is that his brutal hitting, canny medium pace and vivacious fielding have been perfectly suited to the T20 circuit. As well as for Essex, ten Doeschate has played in T20 leagues in Australia, Bangladesh, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Zimbabwe, and five years in the IPL for Kolkata Knight Riders. “It’s been a privilege to travel to great places and meet new people. I’ve also played with and against all the best players of this and even the last generation, which isn’t something that happens for most cricketers.”But his lack of matches for the Dutch have also been an indictment of Netherlands, and their failure to create a set-up that encouraged their greatest ever player to remain involved. Ten Doeschate even declined to play in the World T20 competitions in 2014 or 2016, when he had no other commitments.

I had a decent World Cup, didn’t enjoy it, and walked away from Dutch cricket. I think that says enough

“Despite what people think regarding chasing money, my main reason for stopping was that I didn’t enjoy the 2011 World Cup. I’m not pointing fingers but that was enough to sway me to invest my time in other things,” he explains. “I had a decent World Cup, didn’t enjoy it, and walked away from Dutch cricket. I think that says enough.”That ten Doeschate is returning speaks of how the Dutch team set-up has evolved since then. “I hear it is vastly different,” he says. The captain, Peter Borren, agrees: “We were an immature and amateur set-up in 2011. There is no comparison between the attitude and commitment of the current national team and that of 2011.”In the years since his last international, he could have represented another nation: his native South Africa. A few months before the 2015 World Cup, he received a phone call from Russell Domingo, then South Africa’s coach, who had a Jacques Kallis-shaped hole to fill in the ODI side. “I think it was an exploratory line of approach,” ten Doeschate recalls, “but they had better players and I always saw it as a non-starter as I hadn’t put my time in in the domestic game in South Africa. I never heard back from him.”Not that he was perturbed. For all that he has been an itinerant cricketer – playing T20 for 13 different sides – ten Doeschate has always remained rooted in Essex, ever since the county spotted him playing for Western Province in a friendly match in 2003. In his 15th summer at the county, ten Doeschate led them to the Championship title, an achievement he discusses typically undemonstratively.”I think the quality of the journey to get there carries more weight than the achievement, for me personally anyway. For the club it was tremendous, and I enjoyed that satisfaction it brought to all the non-playing people of the club. There are so many factors that go into getting it right.”Now Netherlands will again benefit from the pedigree of a player who averages over 45 in both first-class and List A cricket. In international cricket, his performances have gone from excellent to absurd. Ten Doeschate’s eight Intercontinental Cup games for Netherlands brought 1285 runs at 142.77 apiece. His 33 ODIs brought 1541 at 67.00, including five centuries.Should he play in the World Cup qualifiers, scheduled for March – “Let’s see how this tour goes” – he will have the highest average to protect of anyone to have played at least 25 ODIs. When his international recall was announced, the ICC’s Twitter account reminded ten Doeschate of the fact, proclaiming him the man with a ODI batting average better than Babar Azam, Virat Kohli and AB de Villiers.”That makes me laugh. I’m still getting over the embarrassment of all the tweets to me, Babar, AB and Virat.” Still, there is worse company.

Adil Rashid's dip-and-rise gives Yorkshire a bittersweet afternoon

Decision to quit red-ball cricket has paid off so far in white-ball returns, even if Rashid’s home county sees less of him than they’d like

Melinda Farrell at Headingley17-Jul-20180:48

Overcoming challenges a good World Cup preparation – Morgan

How bittersweet was this for Yorkshire fans?There they were, crammed into Headingley with assorted visitors, India and England fans alike, part of sell-out crowd that had snaffled up all the tickets months ago, and cheering on one of their own in Adil Rashid as he cracked India open and exposed middle-order frailties.And there was Rashid, his lilting dip-and-rise run-up, echoes of a gentle rollercoaster, culminating in deliveries that jigged and jagged off a grippy pitch.He delivered a sandwich of wickets, eagerly devoured by England. The first slice of bread: Dinesh Karthik, given his chance at the expense of KL Rahul and withstanding the hard early overs of his innings. Just as he looked set and ready to expand it came: dip-and-rise. The ball tossed up outside off stump and a somewhat flat-footed DK dragging an expansive drive onto the stumps.The accompanying slice: Suresh Raina, desperately trying to make his second chance count in this series after nearly three years out of India’s ODI side. His stay was short. Just four balls of dip-and-rise and Raina was gone, obligingly turning the ball into the ready hands of Joe Root at second slip.But it was the delicious Kohli filling that made the mouth water. A moment for Rashid to savour and play on repeat in his memory. At the start of the over that also claimed the wicket of Raina, a dangerously set Virat Kohli looked in control. One of the world’s best players of spin had been dropped on 23 and was threatening to make England pay. Dip-and-rise. The ball flighted nicely and zigged on leg-stump before zagging into off. It wasn’t the best ball Rashid has ever bowled. He has served up better, by his own reckoning, to lesser batsmen. But this – the second time he had taken the Indian captain’s wicket during this series – this was the most satisfying. King Kohli was castled – the first time by a legspinner in his ODI career – and he couldn’t quite comprehend it. The astonishment was clear on his face as his eyes tracked from the pitch to the bowler.A bitter disappointment for Kohli but how sweet for Rashid?And how bittersweet for Yorkshire fans. Yes, them again. Watching their rollercoaster leggie turning matches for England after turning away from playing red-ball cricket for his county before the start of the season. On Sunday, Yorkshire will play the old enemy, Lancashire, in a County Championship match. A White Rose victory over the Red is the one that matters most in these parts. What wouldn’t they give to see a wave of dip-and-rise at Old Trafford?The leg-spinning role will instead be filled by Josh Poysden, on a one-match loan from Warwickshire. Poysden has played just one Championship match this season, in which he took a five-wicket haul against Kent, the presence of Jeetan Patel making it difficult for Warwickshire to accommodate him.While there have been rumblings of discontent about Rashid’s decision among fans, it would be churlish to judge him. How many people would make career decisions based on others’ desires rather than their own wishes? Rashid may even change his mind and return to red-ball cricket at some point in the future. He is currently 30 years old; he still has time.And there is some evidence that his choice is paying off. From the 2015 World Cup to the time he gave up red-ball cricket, Rashid took 67 wickets in 43 ODIs, with an average of 31.35 and an economy rate of 5.60. Since playing his last Championship match for Yorkshire last season, he has claimed 43 wickets in 24 ODIs, with an average of 27.64 and an economy rate of 5.38.If Rashid’s concentration on white-ball cricket at the expense of the longer form leads to a World Cup-winning contribution, Yorkshire’s loss will certainly be seen as England’s gain.Even Yorkshire fans might accept a few bittersweet moments for such an outcome.At a pinch.

Why did Rashid Khan fail in the India Test?

Too many variations, poor fields, and a lack of first-class bowling experience

Aakash Chopra17-Jun-2018What makes him an irresistible force in T20?
Legspinners have a distinct advantage over fingerspinners in being able to turn the ball either way without much changing the action or bending the arm. The fact that they can take the ball away from both left- and right-hand batsmen makes them successful in T20 because most big hits are through the on side, using the bottom hand, and legspinners make batsmen hit against the spin.Leggies do have to change the way they deliver the ball while moving from bowling legspin to googlies. From 22 yards away you can usually see the back of the hand when the googly is bowled, and so can play accordingly. In Rashid Khan’s case, it’s almost impossible to differentiate between the two variations because you see the back of his hand even when he’s bowling legspin. The only difference is the split-finger grip for legspin and joined fingers for a googly, but that’s too difficult to spot. In addition, he has a quick-arm action that leads to higher bowling speeds, which in turn make stepping out a difficult option to employ. Such is the speed of his deliveries that some of the hittable balls go unpunished because batsmen don’t have time to latch on to them.Why didn’t Rashid’s methods work in the Test match?
The value of patience in Test cricket, for both batting and bowling, can never be overstated. The key to Rashid’s success in T20, like for most other successful bowlers in the format, was not bowling two identical deliveries on the trot. The idea in the shortest format is to keep the batsman guessing by mixing it up almost every ball. In the first two sessions on the first day of the Test, Rashid did exactly that, and it didn’t work.In Tests, you need to focus on one stock delivery and use the variation only occasionally. The art of bowling six balls in an over in almost the same spot is the first requirement to succeed in Tests. It was only later on the first day that Rashid started bowling a lot of legspin deliveries and only few googlies. Also, bowling different variations too often makes it impossible to set the field, for unlike in T20 cricket, you need to pack one side in Tests and have few boundary riders.Why the field placements did not work
Rashid has always bowled to a spread-out fields in T20 cricket, which meant that some good shots, and many relatively loose balls, only went for singles. It doesn’t work like that in Test cricket, where every loose ball is put away for a boundary.Since Rashid doesn’t pause in his delivery stride, he has a tendency of bowling a little short once in a while, and these short balls are dispatched for boundaries in Tests because of the lack of protection in the deep.Rashid and Afghanistan started with an overly attacking field, which resulted in a lot of runs being scored off him. His economy was over seven per over in the first session.In addition to the loose balls and attacking field, the change in the batsmen’s mindset also contributed to making him a slightly lesser force. In T20 cricket, the situation forces batsmen to make a move, and they are compelled to manufacture shots. Since time is not of the essence in Tests, batsmen are happy to wait for the bad ball to come their way, and that seemed to have forced Rashid to try a little too hard.How the lack of first-class cricket hurt
The advantage of coming up the ranks in countries like India, Australia and England is that you usually have played about 40-50 first-class matches by the time you break into the national team. So you’re well versed with the demands of playing the longer formats. It’s one thing knowing that you need to bowl ball after ball at a similar spot for many overs at a stretch, but it can’t be executed if you haven’t done it many times over in the past.Afghanistan’s first Test was only Rashid’s fifth first-class game, and it was optimistic to expect him to acquire a new skill and muscle memory overnight.While he did show considerable improvement as the match went on, it’ll take a lot of cricket with the red ball before he becomes the same force in Test cricket as he is in T20.Also, lots of people seem to be advising him to bowl slower to become more effective in Tests, but I wouldn’t do that. His success doesn’t depend on the speed at which he bowls but how consistently he bowls at one spot. He will also need to choose either the legspinner or the googly as his stock ball, and stick to using the other for variation only once in a while.The art of setting up dismissals in Tests is quite different from that of setting up dismissals in T20. A few dot balls are enough to make the batsman jittery in T20, but in Tests, Rashid will need to master the art of boring batsmen with consistent and persistent line and length to induce mistakes.He is a finished product in the shortest format but a work in progress in the longest.

How the ball-tampering episode unfolded in St Lucia

Sri Lanka captain Dinesh Chandimal has been officially charged with ball tampering in the ongoing Test. Here is the sequence that led to the state of events

Andrew Fidel Fernando and Osman Samiuddin17-Jun-2018Sri Lanka captain Dinesh Chandimal has been suspended for one Test for ball tampering. In addition, Chandimal, coach Chandika Hathurusingha and team manager Asanka Gurusinha, have also been charged with a Level 3 spirit of cricket offence, for their part in having kept the Sri Lanka team off the field for almost two hours on day three of the St. Lucia Test. If found guilty of the spirit of cricket offence, the three men could receive suspensions of between two to four Tests. Here is the sequence of events that led to this situation. Following play on the second evening, in which Sri Lanka were straining for wickets, umpires Aleem Dar, Ian Gould and television umpire Richard Kettleborough, had had some concerns over the methods Sri Lanka had used to maintain the ball. As a result, they asked the television crew if they had any suspicious footage. The next morning, the umpires viewed footage (which may be viewed here) of Chandimal retrieving something from his pocket, putting it into his mouth, and only a few seconds later, applying that saliva to the ball before handing it to bowler Lahiru Kumara. Upon viewing this footage, the umpires laid the charge of ball tampering, about 10 minutes before the teams were due to take the field on day three. Incensed partly by the timing of this charge, and the fact that the ball had been changed by the umpires, the Sri Lanka team refused to take the field. Over the course of two hours, in which Sri Lanka team management was seen in animated discussions with match referee Javagal Srinath, and had also been in contact with cricket administrators in Colombo, the matter was discussed at length. Among Sri Lanka’s concerns was the timing of the charge. They believed it should have been laid on the second evening itself, rather than having been sprung on the team just before play. Eventually Srinath issued an ultimatum: either Sri Lanka take the field before 11:30 am (the scheduled start had been 9:30), or forfeit the game. Sri Lanka resumed play just before this period elapsed. That Srinath allowed Sri Lanka such a lengthy grace period is because the team was in constant contact with him and the other match officials. In fact, there was one false start – Sri Lanka had taken the field to resume play before being hauled off it again by team management. In the time they were on the field, Chandimal was in discussion with at least one umpire. Later on day three, Sri Lanka cricket issued a release stating that the team strongly denied all charges, with the support of its administrators. Chandimal pleaded not guilty to the charge, and play went on as usual. The match was eventually drawn – Sri Lanka essentially running out of time as they attempted to dismiss West Indies in the final innings. The rain had also washed out most of the final session. West Indies had five wickets remaining. A hearing was held following the end of the second Test, during which Chandimal was shown the footage. According to ICC release, Chandimal had said at this hearing that he did not remember what he had put in his mouth. Finding this explanation unconvincing, Srinath imposed the harshest possible sentence for a ball-tampering offence: a one-Test suspension. In the wake of the Cape Town ball-tampering scandal, match officials had in fact been instructed by the ICC to impose the harshest possible penalties on ball tamperers – a fact that Srinath had conveyed to both teams before the start of the series. In addition to this suspension, the match officials charged captain, coach and manager with a Level 3 spirit of cricket offence. If coach and manager are found guilty, they will not be allowed to be in the dressing room while they serve out their suspensions. Chandimal is allowed to be inside the dressing room, but cannot step out into the field of play, even to carry drinks.

The stirring journey of a team of nomads

Afghanistan’s players have surmounted incredible odds to change the image of their country in the lead-up to their maiden Test in Bengaluru

Sidharth Monga13-Jun-20185:44

Afghanistan set for new chapter in dream year

Not many know that during their time in India, the Beatles wrote a song about Dehradun. They must have travelled to Dehradun and put together this ditty when they spent time in the nearby pilgrimage town Rishikesh, in the foothills of the magnificent Himalayas. They never released it, but it is clear Dehradun to them is a consciousness and not a town: “Many roads can take you there, many different ways. One direction takes you years, another takes days.”It literally takes days to get there now. Dehradun could have been a great Indian town. It has two of the best schools in the country, the prestigious Indian Military Academy and the Forest Research Institute, an institute crucial to our knowledge, and conserving our forests. Ironically, deforestation has been rampant here to meet the needs of commercialisation. There are buildings and roads everywhere, neither of them good. In the month of June – summer vacation in schools – everybody from the north Indian plains wants to go to the hills, which can take only so many travellers. Those who are sent back base themselves in Dehradun. The town is polluted, hotels are full, roads are blocked, everything is slowed down but not in a pleasant way.It is here that an odd cricketing love story is taking shape. It is Afghanistan’s new adopted “home”, like Sharjah and Greater Noida. The only hotel that is suitable and available is 18.2 kms away from the ground, which is in such wilderness auto-rickshaw drivers have seen leopards – another result of human-wildlife conflict – on that route.Two of Afghanistan’s teams are preparing here: one to play “home” T20Is against Bangladesh, the other to play the away Test against India, Afghanistan’s debut in the format, in Bengaluru. There are two training sessions everyday, on the same pitches with different coloured balls. Four players playing both formats are concentrating only on T20s as of now, but coaches are spending four hours a day on the narrow, dug-up-for-construction Dehradun roads.Dehradun tortures the Afghanistan players. The hills in the distance and the long upright trees remind them of home. The pollution, especially the “noise”, yanks them back, but then the crowd reminds them of home again. The response to Afghanistan during the T20Is is phenomenal. Close to 20,000 come in for the first match, on a Sunday; on the final night, Thursday, gates are opened to the public. They come for Rashid Khan, and stay for Mohammad Shahzad’s hitting and celebrations, Samiullah Shenwari’s big sixes, Mujeeb Ur Rahman’s trickery with the new ball, and Shafiqullah’s magical last-ball save to whitewash Bangladesh.

Dehradun tortures the Afghanistan players. The sight of the hills in the distance, and the long upright trees remind them of home. The pollution, especially the “noise”, yanks them back, but then the crowd reminds them of home again

The reality of it is not lost, though: at the end of the day, it is a “camp”. Granted it is an air-conditioned, luxurious camp, but it is not home. A sport smuggled in by refugees has to now be fine-tuned in a “camp” in another country. Beggars in a goldmine.

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means song in Farsi. The main melody of a is repeated many times in the song. Many have cropped up for Afghanistan cricket and cricketers. There is one for the team, one for Mujeeb and one for Rashid.The for Rashid has taken the form of a devotional song that is typically sung without accompanying music. The lyrics are full of praise for Rashid. It is fitting one of Rashid’s first teams was called “Kochai”, which means nomad. They are still nomads.

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While in Dehradun, despite being in travel, these nomads are fasting because it is Ramadan. They go to sleep at around 4am after – sunrise, beyond which they cannot take food or drink until sunset, around quarter past seven in the evening in these parts – and the Test batch starts training at 10am. The T20 players train in the afternoon, and you can see the bodies are being pushed to their limits because of the fast. Some Pakistani players, involved in a Test series in England at around the same time, fast only on training days but not all. Three players in Afghanistan’s opposition camp, Bangladesh, are fasting.Asghar Stanikzai and Rashid Khan lead the Afghanistan lap of honour•Associated PressThere are provisions in Islam when it is permissible to not fast, and during travel there are allowances. This is the advice tried on this team, but they won’t hear any of it. One of them says you will have to make up the number of fasts you miss later anyway. Another questions the definition of travel: if you are in a place – even if it is not home – for more than 15 days, is it really travel? Another: “This is not rigorous travel. We are staying in air-conditioned hotels and travelling in air-conditioned buses. This is not what the exemption was meant for.”Coach Phil Simmons joined the team at around this time last year. They were playing in the West Indies, and insisted on fasting even then. Wanting to be one of them, Simmons tried it himself. He gave up after two days. “Fasting and playing and training is the hardest thing I have seen in this game,” Simmons says. “When it comes to the night and it is time to eat, they can put away some food.”Simmons doesn’t interfere with the religious beliefs, though. There is good reason for it: the players are clearing fitness tests, they are not shying away from any training, and they are winning matches.If this is not a , a madness, an obsession, then what is?

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In the same month, sinister acts are being carried out back home. A line is crossed when a Ramadan night cricket tournament in Jalalabad, the nursery of cricket in Afghanistan, an annual “peace” event is targeted. Cricketers and the crowd had offered (prayers), broken their fast, and were at the ground when an explosion killed at least eight and injured 50. The T20 specialists in India were looking forward to taking part in the final stages of this tournament when they got home. Instead they saw Karim Sadiq, an Afghanistan international hoping to make the Test squad and then retire, in cellphone footage carrying the wounded to ambulances.What is your problem again? Too many fans taking selfies?

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This is not just any attack. This is an attack on hope. They could have got a national player. They have got a potential future international. They managed to get Hedayatullah Zahir, the promoter of this tournament.There is an anger the players just don’t know how to express. Simmons remembers a time when they were in Noida – another “camp” before they moved to Dehradun – and there were three blasts back home in a week. “We were just pushing them as hard as we could,” Simmons says. “We could see on their faces – ‘Geez what happened back home?’ – but when we started practising, they practised hard. Some of them would talk about it, some wouldn’t really. With all that’s going on, there was still that sense that we still want to do well here.”They are finding their own ways to protest even though it is not wise and easy with their families in Afghanistan. Rashid, playing for Sunrisers Hyderabad in India at the time of the Jalalabad attack, tweets a tribute to Hedayatullah, using #peacecup and #blast heartbreakingly next to each other. Sadiq tweets pictures of open defiance during Rashid’s next IPL match: he gathers people, sets up a TV on the pitch in the same ground that was attacked, watches the match there and tweets a picture without expressly saying anything. It is hard to find a cricketer who has sent out a greater message: we will not be scared, we will still gather and do things as a community.

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This revolution is being led on a small device: the smartphone. Rashid is tweeting on his phone, the poignant pictures from the attack are seen world over through phone footage, Sadiq is using the phone to take those moving photos. The smartphone is a great equaliser for developing countries in south-east Asia. It is affordable unlike big computers and cheap data empowers people with information, and you don’t any longer need to be from a certain section of society to make your voice heard.As with anything so powerful, it can be dangerous in the wrong hands. Journalist Matiullah Abid has reported how videos on phones lead the recruitment drive for organisations such as the Taliban and ISIS. Every peace-loving parent is worried about impressionable young children watching these videos on their phones. The only thing fighting for memory space on their phones is cricket.

Afsar Zazai, wicketkeeper-batsman in longer forms, says every other phone’s back cover is a photo of the owner’s favourite cricketer

Afsar Zazai, wicketkeeper-batsman in longer forms, says every other phone’s back cover is a photo of the owner’s favourite cricketer. Mujeeb has mastered the carrom ball watching YouTube videos of R Ashwin, Sunil Narine and Ajantha Mendis on a slow-motion app on his phone. Every Afghanistan cricketer is conscious of the need to use his social media pages to spread a positive image of Afghanistan. Sadiq tweets a photo where kids have gathered in an open field in the middle of the night, mounted a phone on a mono-pod, connected it to speakers and are watching Afghanistan beat Bangladesh in faraway Dehradun. Beggars in a goldmine.Mujeeb Zadran celebrates Virat Kohli’s wicket•BCCI

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Nazir Khan is happy. He is in Dehradun to watch Afghanistan play. The Afghanistan Cricket Board has sponsored his trip, arranged a visa and has put him up in the team hotel. He has a jovial, grandfatherly face. He wears a colourful brocade jacket with small mirrors on it. Underneath it is a traditional . He carries a big Afghanistan flag.Nazir is not your typical super fan. He doesn’t understand cricket at all. He didn’t know any of it when he started following cricket matches. He just saw it was something that made his countrymen happy. Made him happy. For years he travelled to domestic matches in Afghanistan. Like many of the players, he couldn’t have been sure the team would play international cricket, forget breaching the deepest bastion of this exclusivist format, Test cricket. He started doing this because in desperate times it gave him something to feel good about his country. The first words he speaks as I escort him to the stands – he doesn’t know the language well and can’t find his way – is ” (I am not a Talib).”

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Gulbadin Naib: Players from the Bahamas team told me they were scared of us. Once they sat with us, talked with us, they wouldn’t let us go. They were enamoured

There is a good reason for Nazir’s words. Gulbadin Naib is one of the stars in the seminal documentary “Out Of The Ashes” that covered the meteoric rise of Afghanistan team through the World Cricket League ranks. He is part of the T20 side. “On our first tour, in Jersey in 2008, people were scared of us, our names,” he remembers. “‘He belongs to Afghanistan, it is a terrorist country.’ I have seen it myself that other players in that tournament used to change tracks when they saw us coming. They avoided saying hello to us.”Players from the Bahamas team told me they were scared of us. Once they sat with us, talked with us, they wouldn’t let us go. They were enamoured.”Ten years is a very short period when it comes to changing the image of a country. Ten years later, a man already one of the best bowlers in the history of the Test cricket, R Ashwin, is amazed at how quickly the Afghanistan players have learnt. Correction: taught themselves. Dinesh Karthik calls them an inspiration for everybody. From being thought of as terrorists to being seen as inspiration, cricket has been their only vehicle.”People have started to realise we are a country outside terrorism and drugs,” Gulbadin says now. “When our friends travel, when people come to know they are from Afghanistan, they talk about how good our cricket team is. The immigration officers at airports talk to them about cricket. Now we are not wary of telling people we are from Afghanistan.”What do they know of cricket who only cricket know?

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Even those who only cricket know can’t figure for the life of them how Afghanistan have learnt their cricket. Shahzad – at first look, too big to be a wicketkeeper – didn’t even realise when he started those ultra-quick MS Dhoni-like stumpings. All he knows is he wanted to be like Dhoni and watched tonnes of footage. Mujeeb just watched Ashwin, Narine and Mendis, and tried to bowl like them until his fingers said no more. Naib says nobody showed him the science of wrist positions and different releases for different swings until former South Africa quick Charl Langeveldt joined them recently as a bowling coach.Gulbadin Naib takes selfies with fans•Peter Della Penna/ESPNcricinfo LtdOne look at how Shapoor Zadran runs in, 22-step run-up, long hair bouncing this way and that, and you know whom he watched a lot. The whole country loved Shahid Afridi until he started making political comments recently, but it is Shoaib Akhtar the team is properly reminiscent of. Shoaib acquired pace by bowling with bricks and heavier balls in his street. Shahzad learnt by hitting stones thrown at him by his younger brother. Others learnt bowling with a taped tennis ball. With no coaches.”Other kids in the street used to think I was mad,” Shoaib told the of the days when he used to bowl with bricks. Anyone who has had anything to do with Afghanistan cricket will tell you they are madmen. But it is important to be mad, Shoaib said. Then it is important to find a method once you have found that madness.”We are mad people,” Naib says. “If we make up our mind we have to have something, we find a way to get it. Our fans are the same. If they decide they have to meet so and so player, they will find a way to meet him.”Almost all of them are Pashtun, or Pathan. I tell him the joke that Pathan is not a – a people – but a , a state of mind. However, the composition is changing. The rest of Afghanistan is falling for the sport. Last year, a Turkmen Haji Murad Muradi captained Amo Region in the domestic tournament.

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As they approach Test cricket, Afghanistan are still on the way to finding method in that madness. Copybook coaches Andy Moles and Peter Anderson were not everyone’s cup of tea but their work has not gone unappreciated. Anderson, in particular, was much loved. While other coaches stayed in the fortified Kabul International Hotel, Anderson, the former Queensland wicketkeeper, used to stay with the players in the residential wing of the Kabul International Stadium complex.Afsar is someone who has worked a lot with Anderson. “I would like to specially thank Peter Anderson,” he says. “He treated me like his son. I respect him. He worked so much with me, on my keeping, on my batting. Andy Moles told me that at the highest level you get very few opportunities to hit sixes. You have to think about building your innings. Ones and twos. Hit the loose balls only. And there are too many hitters in the Afghanistan team anyway.”Afsar says he has been sad for the last couple of days because Anderson is ill and is on his way to the USA for treatment. Yet he has one eye on what is happening in India. He has been texting wishes for Afsar and Afghanistan.”Once they sat with us, talked with us, they wouldn’t let us go.”

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“The thing that I have to mostly harp on a lot is the fact that it’s a long game. It is a game of patience, like a chess match.”•AFPSimmons is the best of both worlds for most of the team. They feel Simmons understands them because they play like West Indies. A month before the 2012 World T20, Afghanistan played a four-nation preparatory tournament in the Caribbean, involving them, Bangladesh, Trinidad & Tobago and Barbados. They were playing T&T’s second XI in an exhibition game before the tournament when T&T coach David Williams snuck into the stands. When Williams introduced himself to the Afghanistan team after the match, then manager and now CEO Shafiqullah Stanikzai asked him what he had gleaned now that he was scouting them.”How can I glean anything from the way you play?” Williams asked. “You all hit sixes, from No. 1 to 11.”The love affair with the West Indies style of play has continued in the way they celebrate and their friendship with the West Indies players”I think that is fair to say they play like us,” Simmons says. “It is a case of them enjoying what it is they do. There is a fun about the way they are. They enjoy whatever they are doing.”However, Simmons finds a closer link with Pakistan. The way they have taught themselves, similar challenges, similar geography, similar resources or lack thereof, similar ways of talking about the game. And take it from Simmons: he has played against Pakistan when they were the only team able to challenge West Indies.

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Afsar’s father is a taxi driver. He drives all over Kabul, not necessarily to earn a living but because after a life full of hard labour he finds it tough to stay at home. It leaves Afsar worried, especially when he is away playing. “We [regular Afghan people] leave ourselves in the hands of God when we go out for work,” Afsar says. “But we can’t run away from this. This is our nation. We can’t leave it.”Afsar could well have added “again” to that sentence. Like many, Afsar and Naib both grew up in Pakistan. Naib knows how to read and write Urdu but is only still learning Pashto and Farsi. Their family had a prospering clothes business in Peshawar but he saw his father yearn for his homeland all his life. It was cricket, his selection, and future instructions from the Afghanistan government that finally gave them the courage to come back, in 2010.”I used to think it might be better to live in another country,” Naib says. “But what did I end up with? I don’t even know my own language. My father took us there for survival but I am happy my son is growing up in Afghanistan, studying in Afghanistan.”When they are away some players use their sources in intelligence to warn their loved ones against going into certain parts. Nabi, whose father was once kidnapped and released after two months, Samiullah and Naib live in the same highly secure residential society so they are a little relieved. They all know that these measures are neither foolproof nor available to all.Chris Gayle poses with the Afghanistan players after the match•IDI/Getty Images”Last year, we were in West Indies, again during Ramadan, and 400 died in an explosion,” Naib says. “When they attacked the cricket this Ramadan, it felt like everything was coming to an end. Despite all that hope turns up. People get back to their lives. Whatever they do, we won’t give up living. It gives us strength too.””The sense of where they come from, what happens in their country, and for them to be enjoying as much as they are, day in, day out, it gives you a sense of their passion for cricket and for life,” Simmons says. “They are hurting from what’s happening in their country, but they know they hurt now, ‘but for the next two-three hours we have to go and play, and then we come back and sit in prayer’. It is a case of knowing what is to be done when.”

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Two days before the Test, with just a few days to go to the end of Ramadan, Afghanistan have stopped fasting. There is realisation that you can’t go to sleep having eaten after 3am and then wake up for a 9.30am start and go through a gruelling Test match on no nutrition.There are so many things you can’t do in Test cricket. Two dots won’t bring the big shot on which you capitalise as Mujeeb does in T20s. Two boundaries won’t send Ashwin scurrying. They are coming off fairly ordinary preparation for Test cricket. The Test team practised on T20 pitches, which were so slow at times the coaches had to take them to an indoor academy – owned by Bengal player Abhimanyu Easwaran’s father – so that the batsmen could get some confidence going. A ground custom-built by Easwaran to help his son play cricket coming to the rescue of a team of nomads.Watch them in the nets and you know one of the reasons they have come along so quickly. Nabi especially spends a lot of time talking to batsmen after every ball. All youngsters acknowledge the knowledge passed on by the seniors who have had the privilege of playing in highly professional teams. On the field Shahzad can be seen talking to his players animatedly. None of their wisdom is withheld.Simmons’ worry is not the skills. He hopes the emotions don’t overwhelm them when the paraphernalia of Test cricket comes around. The new whites, the photos in blazers, the world media. If it seems premature to give Afghanistan Test status, if it seems their preparation is not ideal, if there are doubts over how they will cope, don’t worry about them, they have done things much more special than play Test cricket; they have already climbed mountains no Test cricketer should be asked to climb. Give them some time, they will be all right.

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Mohammad Shahzad and Samiullah Shenwari celebrate Afghanistan’s win•Associated PressFor coaches in top-flight sport, the biggest challenge is to rid their players of insecurities. Insecurities don’t come with a tag. You have to identify them. “The main insecurity with some of them is being dropped, being left out, not being able to play cricket,” Simmons says.”Ones that are left out you have to let them know this is not the end. You have to work as hard as possible to try and get back. They are hungry, they want to be a part of what’s happening. The fear in that case is not being part of what is happening. It’s not just being left out. Of history.”Nawroz Mangal, Noor Ali Zadran, Hamid Hassan, Dawlat Zadran and Sadiq are some of the players who have made big sacrifices to bring Afghanistan to this historical juncture. Sadiq has been desperate, even making a plea that he will retire if he gets to play this match. He has just not been in form, though. It is somewhat similar to Shahzad missing the 2015 World Cup after playing a big role in helping them qualify.”Simple example,” Simmons says. “Martin Luther King did all the fighting for black equality in the States but he didn’t live to enjoy it. That’s how things are. People who fight for somethings sometimes are not the people who get to enjoy the fruits of it. That’s just how it is.”West indies teams, all the Sirs who played for West Indies, Sir Garry, Sir Wes Hall, Charlie Griffith, Sir Frank Worrell, Walcott, Weekes, all of them didn’t live to enjoy all that happened in West Indies cricket with Clive Lloyd at the helm. But they sat back and they enjoyed that phase of the cricket because they were part of us getting to that stage. That’s what Karim and others need to do. Sit back and enjoy this Test match.”Preferably as a big group in an open field. In defiance. And tweet that photo. “Whatever you do, we won’t give up living.”

Who removed my spinner?

It is hard enough to win away Tests, but India keep making it harder for themselves by misreading conditions and selecting poorly

Sidharth Monga in Perth14-Dec-20183:30

Kartik: Bhuvneshwar would have been more effective on this surface

At the end of a hard day’s grind for India, after the other 10 had left the field, Ravindra Jadeja walked along the length of a treacherous pitch, giving it a close look. Although Jadeja easily spent 15-20 overs on the field – substituting for Ishant Sharma, Mohammed Shami, Jasprit Bumrah, Virat Kohli and M Vijay – he was not allowed anywhere near the pitch, which is exactly where he should have been wheeling away over after over to do what R Ashwin did in Adelaide: plug one end up, exploit the bounce, allow the fast bowlers short, sharp spells from the other end in the 39C heat, take whatever wickets come your way; in other words, be the frontline spinner.India didn’t have any. Yet again, the team management had misread a pitch. It is hard enough to win away Tests. It is harder still to do so after losing the toss. India just keep making it harder for themselves by misreading pitches and selecting poorly. You could tell from how Virat Kohli spoke a day before the Test – “we hope no grass is shaved off”, “we are more excited than nervous”, “we have the fast bowlers to exploit these conditions” – there was a real danger of India getting carried away.This was only the third time in their history that India went into a Test without a specialist spinner – not counting Sydney 1991-92 because India did have the now-coach Ravi Shastri, a capable spinner in a variety of ways. There is a sound reason for that. Actually a variety of sound reasons. Good spinners help control the pace of the game. You get caught out on a stinker, they help you keep the fast bowlers fresh. You need to bowl last, they become crucial. You need them for over rate. You need them as a fail-safe; if the pitch is helpful for fast bowlers that you think you can play four of them, three of them should do the job anyway. Most importantly, as the team management of a professional Test side, you can’t be misreading conditions so often.The Kohli-Shastri captain-coach team has led India in 12 Tests outside Asia and the West Indies. Here is a non-results-based assessment of their team selections.

Adelaide 2014-15 – Play Karn Sharma – 66 first-class wickets in 34 matches at the time – ahead of R Ashwin. Karn goes for nearly five an over while opposition spinner Nathan Lyon takes 12 wickets.Sydney 2014-15 – Drop Cheteshwar Pujara, who had just helped India draw a Test. Play out-of-sorts Suresh Raina.Cape Town 2017-18 – Drop Ajinkya Rahane based on his form on slower pitches. Play Rohit Sharma.Centurion 2017-18 – Continue excluding Rahane, and also drop Bhuvneshwar Kumar, India’s best bowler and second-best batsman in the previous Test.Johannesburg, 2017-18 – Finally get Rahane back, but play five bowlers on a brutish pitch where extra batting cover is required. Hardik Pandya is required to bowl only eight overs.Birmingham 2018 – Shikhar Dhawan is picked again. Only one spinner when Ashwin takes wickets even on day one. Pandya required to bowl only 10 overs.Lord’s 2018 – Two spinners in a four-day Test on a pitch kept under covers and moist with the weather around.Trent Bridge 2018 – Get it right.Southampton 2018 – Play Ashwin, who has not yet fully recovered from an injury. Believed to be 75-80%.The Oval 2018 – Pick Hanuma Vihari ahead of Karun Nair, who has been with the squad for ages and might never get to play a Test again.Adelaide 2018-19 – Get it right. Perfect combination. Six batsmen on a difficult pitch, balanced attack of three best quicks and No. 1 spinner.

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‘We bounced back very well in every session’ – Vihari

That bring us to Perth 2018-19. Part-time spinner Vihari is the leading wicket-taker for India after day one. Lyon must already be chomping at the bit thinking of bowling on this track to right-hand batsmen not very adept at avoiding bat-pad catches.This could be the cost of Adelaide where Australia kept India on the field for most of the last day, which is when Ashwin bowled with early signs of the injury. The next day was a three-and-a-half-hour flight, which also put them two-and-a-half hours behind Adelaide time. They then had two days to get their body clocks right, and more importantly recover from the wear and tear. India’s premier spinner couldn’t. What’s probably more disturbing is that, knowing this Indian side, they might still have gone with no spinner even if Ashwin had been fit and available.It also begs the question if India don’t trust Jadeja enough. There has to be a reason why Kuldeep Yadav played at Lord’s when they felt the need for two spinners, and Jadeja was kept out even when Ashwin was not a 100% for Southampton. The last time Jadeja played a live rubber as the only spinner in the side was way back in 2014, at Old Trafford. If there is no trust in him, does Jadeja travel only for his substituting abilities? India didn’t even use them in Adelaide, with Vihari doing the job for most of the time.Ashwin’s bowling is not the only thing India will miss this Test. He scored 25 in a crucial 62-run stand with Cheteshwar Pujara from 127 for 6 to turn the Test around India’s way. Now India’s tail will begin at No. 8. They could have of course gone for Bhuvneshwar Kumar to address that situation, but India chose Umesh Yadav, who went at 3.77 an over, got a wicket off a long hop and kept releasing the pressure with easy scoring opportunities.It was a day when all that could go wrong did. India lost the toss. Ishant Sharma, under the scanner for his missed no-balls in Adelaide, was called when he had not even overstepped. The umpire in question was also under the scanner, Kumar Dharmasena, from whose end Ishant did a lot of bowling in Adelaide. Here Ishant had to change ends, struggled for rhythm with his no-ball problems, and finally returned to Dharmasena’s end only when the second new ball was taken, taking wicket first ball.Despite all that – poor selection, lost toss, wayward start, slow over rate – India showed a lot of heart and resilience on the field. Jasprit Bumrah, unsurprisingly, was the leader of this revival. Once again he showed his aptitude by immediately correcting his lengths after a first spell that read 5-0-20-0. He built pressure all day long with subsequent spells of 4-2-6-0, 5-3-3-1, 1-1-0-0, 3-1-4-0, and 4-1-8-1. India rallied around him, fielded well, and toiled hard on the kind of day teams are known to totally fall to pieces.India still are the best Test team in the world, but when you watch them fight through spiritedly in these difficult situations, when you see the skill on offer, you actually wonder how much better they can be if they don’t misread the conditions so often. And there’s no spin anyone can put on that.

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