India paid heavily for their reckless batting
Erapalli Prasanna - 1 February 2002
It was a humdinger of a match at the Feroz Shah Kotla in New Delhi. It
all boiled down to the final ball and only a fantastic save at the
cover point fence ensured that England won the one-dayer by two runs. The
Indians had been agonisingly close to sealing the series but their hopes
were finally doused.
© CricInfo |
I find it hard to reconcile myself to the manner in which Sourav
Ganguly's team lost this game. It was brittle batting under pressure
that was to blame for the defeat. Having said that, I was delighted to
see Agarkar make his runs in a pressure-cooker situation. The young man
has had a wretched run of form with the bat in recent times, but on
Thursday he proved his ability to fight it out when the chips are down.
Agarkar nearly pulled off a miraculous last ball win for India without
much support from his partners. Anil Kumble's dismissal epitomised the
dismal batting effort by the senior players in the side. When the
situation demanded a cool head, Kumble threw it all away, playing a rank
bad shot to be bowled. I think that Kumble's downfall cost India the
match. Five of the Indian batsmen gifted their wickets to left-arm
spinner Ashley Giles, whose bowling was not as menacing as his final
figures suggested.
Whenever India chases a stiff target, they obviously look to Tendulkar
to show the way. It is as true as broad daylight that the Indian batting
revolves around the little master. Ganguly is not back to his best, and
is finding it difficult to keep the momentum going during the initial
phase of his innings. On Thursday, there were shades of the Ganguly we
all have come to respect when he played a few scintillating shots off
Giles. The Indian skipper, though, failed to stay till the end and see
India through to victory.
Mohammad Kaif, for his part, gave enough evidence of his talent and
temperament for the shorter version of the game. The same, though, could
not be said of young off-spinner Sarandeep Singh and there was no
denying the fact that India missed the services of Harbhajan Singh at
the Kotla.
What Delhi also proved is that there has to be all-round improvement in
the planning as well as execution, if India are to seal the series.
The England game plan, meanwhile, clearly revolved around taking quick
singles, knowing, as they did only too well, the limitations of the
Indian ground fielding. Nick Knight played a brilliant hand and was well
supported by Marcus Trescothick and Nasser Hussain. As I have been
writing in my columns, it is important for Andrew Flintoff to contribute
a few valuable runs to the English cause. The beefy all-rounder's
explosive half century played a major part in the English win.
© CricInfo |
With the series currently 3-2 in India's favour, it might be a shrewd
move for England to bring Graham Thorpe in at number three. Hussain's
attacking instincts should also help his resurgent side as they pursue a
series levelling win at Mumbai. I have a gut feeling that the English
fast bowlers might cherish the opportunity to bowl at the Wankhede
Stadium which offers greater bounce than the wickets at Kanpur and New
Delhi.
At the back of their mind, however, would be the thought that Sachin
Tendulkar would be hoping to please his home crowd.
© CricInfo