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I would not like to be in Rahul
Dravids shoes if I am the captain. In the entire Sourav
Ganguly episode, his silence borders on complicity. He has
every reason to seek the team he wants, but he also owes
it to his men to be seen standing right next to them. At
best he would miss out on the trust and loyalty of his mates
which allows a captain to ask for the impossible; at worst
he would be very unpopular in the dressing room.
Truth to tell, Sourav was very
impressive at the Kotla. His two knocks (40 and 39) were
well crafted and critical to the eventual scores. His dismissal
in the first innings triggered the collapse which only accentuates
his contribution on the first day. A few of his cover drives,
trust me, were the best I saw in the entire match.
He was seen giving his 100 per
cent, he wanted his place back badly. Such hunger is to
be welcomed, not scorned. It has not reflected well of the
system, not of selectors or team management.
The match, by and large, did not
reflect well on the batsmen who seemed to suffer from sudden
collapses. In a way it was a tribute to Murali and Kumble
who both tend to take wickets in a clutch. You give them
an inch and they would set you back by miles.
It was thus imperative for the
batsmen to stay at the crease for long hours. India made
the mistake in the first innings but learnt their lesson
in the second outing. Sri Lanka only did the repeat act.
It was not a wicket where you
score 240s in your two innings. It is here that Mahela Jayawardenes
horrid shot in the first innings hurt the team the most.
Kumble needed just such an invitation.
The man now has more variety than he used to in our times
when we strictly dealt with him like a medium-pacer. He
has a good slider with a hint of googly and his variation
of pace is brilliant. He still is best negotiated if you
keep rotating the strike.
Maravan Atapattu and Jayawardene
did it in the first innings and Kumble looked ordinary.
The moment he could force batsmen to go back into their
shells, the pressure built up. The wicket, too, was his
ally in a way ? it was slow and low, and batsmen were forced
to play him in front of the wicket. It restricted them from
manipulating him around the field.
If the Lankans looked messed up
in their handling of Kumble, they also did not win any points
for allowing Irfan Pathan to run away with an impressive
score. The visitors did not seem to have learnt anything
from the one-dayers.
Sri Lankan planning against Pathan
was all skewed up even though bringing on Murali in the
second over suggested they sensed his weakness against the
magical off-spinner. I would have preferred to keep medium-pacers
on for at least four-five overs, but then, it is easier
to be wise on hindsight.
I cant really close without
joining others in applauding the feat of Sachin Tendulkar.
He has been a marvel of our times, a once-in-a-generation
cricketer who scores a perfect ten on all scales of excellence.
His lustre remains undimmed and
so is the inspiration which his presence imparts to millions
of youngsters. He is the high deity of the game we all love.
(PTI)
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