All posts tagged: batsmens

‘Couldn’t be bothered’: Sunil Gavaskar tears into England batsmen’s ‘couldn’t-care-less’ approach after Ashes debacle | Cricket News

‘Couldn’t be bothered’: Sunil Gavaskar tears into England batsmen’s ‘couldn’t-care-less’ approach after Ashes debacle | Cricket News

No batter in the England Test squad apart from Joe Root care about putting value to their wicket as they know that they will never be left out of the squad, India batting great Sunil Gavaskar has said. Gavaskar acknowledged the fact that Brendon McCullum was a great player and brought a freshness to England cricket as a coach before stating that once it wore off, they were found to be batsmen who couldn’t do much once pitches gave bowlers some assistance. Gavaskar’s criticism comes in the wake of England’s abject performance in their 4-1 defeat to Australia in the Ashes. While a number of English former cricketers had predicted the side to win the series, Gavaskar said that their defeat comes as no surprise only to non-English fans. “Valuing playing for your country and putting a minimum price of a century on your wicket is something only the great Joe Root does. The others could not be bothered, as they knew they were unlikely to be left out of the squad,” wrote Gavaskar in …

How Kolkata pitch exposed Indian batsmen’s weakness of skill and temperament | Cricket News

How Kolkata pitch exposed Indian batsmen’s weakness of skill and temperament | Cricket News

The Eden surface was a minefield; it prematurely cracked, crumbled, and had variable hardness. This was a wicket which had no exact doctrine to embrace. It was where the old cliche, stick to the strengths, rings the truest. Attackers had to attack; stonewallers had to stonewall. In-betweenism was bound to fail. The vile nature of the pitch would have invariably played in batsmen’s mind, as Indians stumbled into in-betweenism and failed. On an evil wicket, a batsman only sees the devils. A benign ball grows teeth, a boundary ball develops fangs, a routine good length ball sprouts wings, and the strip becomes a Loch Ness Monster. Batsmen, with jaundiced eyes, start seeing everything in yellow. It distorts the judgment, muddies perceptions, and makes batting look a more treacherous exercise than it actually is. But Gautam Gambhir’s observation that the strip was not unplayable was not entirely bereft of logic. “It might not be a wicket which is going to [allow you to] be very, very flamboyant, where you can play those big shots. But if …

‘India needs pitches where Tests don’t get over on Day 3 and where batsmen’s skill is tested, not luck’

‘India needs pitches where Tests don’t get over on Day 3 and where batsmen’s skill is tested, not luck’

Former batting wall, Cheteshwar Pujara reckoned India needs to seriously reconsider preparing pitches where Test matches in India are getting over on Day 3, and in turn back their spin bowlers who are skilled enough to operate even on flat pitches, and don’t need to rely on luck. “A pitch slightly better than a rank turner,” is Pujara’s prescription, as India collapsed to another home Test loss against South Africa, after losing 0-3 to New Zealand earlier this year. He also stressed a perfect pitch ought to test temperament and technique and not luck, like on turners. Coach Gautam Gambhir stated post the defeat the pitch was exactly what the team had desired, and expected Indian batsmen to know “how to play turn.” But Pujara stated the choice of these rank turner pitches might be a terrible idea, because a lot is left to luck. Story continues below this ad “Luck plays a major part when you are playing on a rank turner,” Pujara warned. “What India needs to do is start playing on a …

‘India needs pitches where Tests don’t get over on Day 3 and where batsmen’s skill is tested, not luck’

‘India needs pitches where Tests don’t get over on Day 3 and where batsmen’s skill is tested, not luck’

Former batting wall, Cheteshwar Pujara reckoned India needs to seriously reconsider preparing pitches where Test matches in India are getting over on Day 3, and in turn back their spin bowlers who are skilled enough to operate even on flat pitches, and don’t need to rely on luck. “A pitch slightly better than a rank turner,” is Pujara’s prescription, as India collapsed to another home Test loss against South Africa, after losing 0-3 to New Zealand earlier this year. He also stressed a perfect pitch ought to test temperament and technique and not luck, like on turners. Coach Gautam Gambhir stated post the defeat the pitch was exactly what the team had desired, and expected Indian batsmen to know “how to play turn.” But Pujara stated the choice of these rank turner pitches might be a terrible idea, because a lot is left to luck. Story continues below this ad “Luck plays a major part when you are playing on a rank turner,” Pujara warned. “What India needs to do is start playing on a …

Pride and injudiciousness: Indian batsmen’s minds wilted, techniques caved in as they are shot out for 46 | Cricket News

Pride and injudiciousness: Indian batsmen’s minds wilted, techniques caved in as they are shot out for 46 | Cricket News

When the sun finally broke through the clouds after days in hiding and shone brightly, the lights were already out of India’s dressing room. Under glowering forenoon skies of Bangalore, the moving and leaping wreck-ball, surgically directed by New Zealand’s pace trio, reduced them to a pile of unflattering records. The 46 they mustered on Day Two in Bangalore was their lowest in the country, the third worst overall and the least a team had ever managed in the continent. For 31.2 overs and 132 minutes, a nightmare within a nightmare unfolded here. Much of it was self-inflicted. India chose to bat knowing fully that the ball would zip and zap; they were aware that this was New Zealand’s strongest suit, (and their own kryptonite). Yet, in the heady over-estimation of their batting prowess or undermining of the conditions, they decide to bat. Perhaps, to challenge their mind and technique against the moving ball released from a trio of bowlers born and raised in similar conditions, who are capable of squeezing every ounce of favourable …