If Australia believes picking an extra spinner is the
solution to overcome Indian batting order then they are a long way off the
mark. India has rarely lost at home over the past two decades and when they
have succumbed to the foreign team it has been largely due to the fast bowlers.
To be precise, India has lost 16 test matches at home in the
last 20 years. Which mean opposition teams have managed to take 20 Indian
wickets 16 times? Out of those 16 loses the spinners have only managed to take
greater than 7 wickets out of 20 only on 3 instances. To drill further down, only 1 of the 3
instances has come in the last decade and that was on a pitch which would have
made the Chennai dust bowl look like an Adelaide oval on Day 1.
India has only been outdone by pace and even when England
played two quality spinners last year; they won the Calcutta test on back of 11
wickets taken between Anderson and Finn.
Australia’s other option is to play the left arm spinner
instead of Lyon. This move will only benefit largely due to the fact the India
top order are armed with plenty of right handers. A theory Michael Clarke believes there not
much merit in.
“To be honest personally I don’t think it matters too much.
Playing against India they are good players of spin and when you have good
players of spin it means they are equally comfortable playing against the ball
spinning in and leaving “
Contrastingly, the Indian skipper thought playing two off
spinners against the left hander Australian top order gives them a benefit.
“When you have a spinner that takes the bowl away from you
he becomes an asset because he can attack the stumps all the time and also be
helpful to contain the batsmen when the ball isn’t turning too much”
They are completely different theories but given the result
of the test match, Dhoni’s theory is proved to be correct. Indian spinners took all 20 wickets and only
5 wickets fell to bowlers spinning the ball back in while 15 yielded to the
ball spinning away.
Perhaps there is a case for Doherty but history suggest not
both. Hyderabad might not be a dust bowl as Chennai with the red clay content
unlikely to be seen but be assured the pitch dished out will have turn and to
make worst it will be quick turn. If that is the case playing Doherty will rank
higher than Lyon.
The way Clarke addressed the media after the match chances
are Australia will cave in to playing the two spinners. A theory that has not
worked based on India's defeats at home over the past two decades.
No comments:
Post a Comment