Thursday, April 25, 2024
HomeUncategorizedIndia’s search for first win in 2014 resumes in New Zealand

India’s search for first win in 2014 resumes in New Zealand

- Advertisement -

India-New-ZealandThoroughly embarrassed in the ODI series, India would aim for a turnaround in fortunes when they take on a sprightly and confident New Zealand in the opening match of a two-Test series starting at Auckland from Thursday.

The Indians were blanked out 0-4 in the five-game ODI series resulting in the team losing its number one status in the ICC rankings.

The visitors thereafter played a two-day warm-up game ahead of the Tests which ended in a draw and gave them mixed results as far as individual form of the players was concerned.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni`s men now need at least a drawn series, if not an outright win, to retain their number two ranking in Test cricket.

With the exception of Pragyan Ojha (Ishwar Pandey replacing him), this is the same Test squad that lost 1-0 in South Africa before this tour.

And after the departure of Sachin Tendulkar, with Indian cricket turning over a new page, that was a respectable result in more ways than one. India`s
young batsmen, untested abroad in the longer format, held their own for nine days before losing on the final day of the two-Test series.

The bowlers, led by the experienced Zaheer Khan, too put in a noteworthy performance, very nearly scaring the Proteas into defeat in the first Test at Johannesburg.

That tour made for a fine marker to carry on from, except the ODI losses thereafter may have undone some of the good work.

This is partly because, barring Murali Vijay and Cheteshwar Pujara, the Indian batting line-up bears the same look in both formats.

And that is worrisome because only Virat Kohli and skipper Dhoni have scored any runs recently. Rohit Sharma has failed to convert his starts into anything substantial, while Ajinkya Rahane has struggled to find his footing here.

While the former has immense backing from the team management, the latter had a good showing in the African Tests to draw confidence from.

As always though, India`s problems begin at the top of the order, wherein Shikhar Dhawan has looked ill at ease ever since he left home.

While most batsmen alter their styles to suit different formats, Dhawan`s aggressive shot-making means that the `brand of cricket` he plays stays the same across all formats.

In that light, his 169 runs in 10 innings since December 2013 stand out. In Africa, where he was targeted by short bowling in both ODIs and Tests, he had scores of 13, 15, 29 and 19. That trend carried over to the ODIs here in New Zealand and will certainly flow over to the Tests as well.

There is some respite to be found in Vijay`s attitude at the other end, as he has looked to leave the ball a lot, waiting for the bad deliveries to score.

If at all there is a problem herein, it is to do with his inability to rotate the strike in the middle of a good spell from the opposition, something that he can very well work on.

Even so, it leaves the run-scoring responsibility mainly to Kohli and Pujara, who will form the backbone of this batting line-up once again.

Kohli`s runs in the preceding ODIs have already placed him on a high pedestal, and it is Pujara who is now the cynosure of all eyes in the build-up to this encounter.

New Zealand know they have double trouble in store for them, considering what this pairing achieved in South Africa against the likes of Dale Steyn, Morne Morkel, Vernon Philander, etc.

If he gets a lot of runs again then questions will certainly be asked about how long Pujara`s solidity can be kept away from the Indian ODI line-up, given that the selection for the Asia Cup will take place sometime during this Test series.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

Latest

Must Read

- Advertisement -

Related News