|
Sidharth Monga
November 15, 2009
![]()
|
||
|
Related Links
News : 'Reputations are there to be made' - Sangakkara
Preview : Battle for top spot kicks off Preview : Sri Lanka face weight of history Analysis : Sri Lanka well poised to challenge India Series/Tournaments:
Sri Lanka tour of India
|
||
His wife, his brother, his coach. An old forgotten supersinger, an old Bollywood superstar, almost every popular athlete in the country, almost every coach he has worked with, cricketers from his country, cricketers from other countries, writers from his country, writers from other countries, astrologers, designers, doctors, hair stylists, almost everyone who has had something to do with him has been interviewed for the occasion. Amid this hullabaloo it is almost forgotten that we are just a day away from what the man who has played international cricket for 20 years yearns for the most. A Test series. Finally there is one for Sachin Tendulkar and for India. And the Sri Lankans, rated No. 2 in Tests by the ICC, do we even know they have been in the country for a week now?
And it's a mean series, this. Sri Lanka may never have beaten India in India, but they caused the home side's famed batting line-up enough embarrassment last year to provide a nice delicious previous to this series. There are a few men in the Indian middle order, thinking payback after the loss in 2008. The cast hasn't changed much either: Muttiah Muralitharan is there, so is Ajantha Mendis; Rahul Dravid, Tendulkar and VVS Laxman are all there. Sourav Ganguly and Anil Kumble are missing, but they are replaced by two younger men just as eager to prove their credentials. One rating point separates the sides in ICC rankings.
Last year in Sri Lanka, Mendis and Murali took 47 wickets between them, in three Tests and for 945 runs, to bring India down to their knees. All other bowlers from both the sides combined to take 48. Things have changed since then. Mendis has played six more Tests, and added just 16 wickets to that tally of 26. Against Pakistan at the P Sara Oval he bowled more bad balls in one session than he did all series against India. But it was India that started the demystification of Mendis in the ODI leg of that tour. This will be Mendis' chance - his bowling much more comprehensible now - to prove he can still be an effective bowler.
This will be Murali's last chance to get rid of a millstone. Despite that dream series in 2008, Australia are the only side against whom his career figures are worse: he averages 30 against India, against 22 overall. Australia is the only country where he averages worse: in India each of his 31 wickets has cost him 40 runs. And it has little to do with conditions: Murali has done better in places like England and South Africa, which assist spinners far less. Almost every visiting spinner has had a hard time in India, and Murali will want to strike out one of the few question marks left in his achievements.
The anomaly persists with the Sri Lankan team as a whole too. They are No. 2 in the world, but are yet to win a Test in Australia, South Africa and India. They are one of the better Sri Lankan sides to have toured India, but they know they won't be able to move to No. 1 without winning a series here, and not just a Test. For that their batting, inexperienced in Indian conditions, will have to deliver the kind of consistency it shows in Sri Lanka. Only four of them have played Tests previously in India - three each on the 2005 tour - and none of them have scored a century here. Mahela Jayawardene, Kumar Sangakkara, Tillakaratne Dilshan and Thilan Samaraweera can't afford to have a similar series. Dilshan and Samaraweera, though, have since then transformed into completely different batsmen: surer of their place and their skill, and hugely more successful.
They know that in head to head with the corresponding batting line-up, they are up against it. But have we realised that this is one of the last times we are seeing Dravid, Tendulkar and Laxman play Tests in India? South Africa are supposed to tour India in February 2010, but we are not sure if they will play just ODIs or if it will be a full tour. The last time they came, they played only Tests. And the year after that will be the year of the World Cup. Who knows who will make what career decision then? Before they go, they would want to, even if for just one day, see India at the top of the Test table, but they are not being helped by the scheduling: they last played a Test in New Zealand, in the first quarter of this year.
The most intriguing reason to watch this series, though, should be the spin face-off. Both sides have three spinners each in their squads, and going by the make-up of their squads at least two each should play in each of the Tests. Harbhajan Singh will be keenly watched. He has been slightly enigmatic over the last year and a half. Superb in Tests in Sri Lanka, and remarkable in unfriendly conditions in New Zealand, he has somehow tended to be just a restrictive bowler in a majority of his limited-overs matches. Being India's No. 1 Test spinner, he will have to lift his game again, quickly. It will be interesting to see how he reacts to a slip, a leg gully, a silly point and a forward short leg.
What sights they will be. All we need is nice, bouncy tracks, and there will be two spinners on either side testing the batsmen. Here's to fielders in close-in positions most of the time, lots of rough, slips taking diving catches, umpires being tested on many bat-pad calls and being distracted by huge crowds appealing along with Indian bowlers, Murali signing off with one last memorable duel with Indian batsmen. And, there's Zaheer Khan coming back, there's Nuwan Kulasekara and Thilan Thushara looking to build on strong performances in home Tests. And Sehwag and Dilshan will be opening the respective innings. If all goes right, there might not be much time to draw breath during this series, like there wasn't in 2008.
| Comments have now been closed for this article |
||||||
Access your Indian Rupee earnings from anywhere in the world.
Who is the best footballer in Europe?
Debate now on the new ESPN Soccernet Castrol Rankings Blog
FREE Cricket DVD offer at Cricshop
Cricshop.com - leading online cricket store
Rugby Union Autumn Internationals coverage
on www.scrum.com
"An old forgotten super singer" - if this is a reference to Lata Mangeshkar, I can tell you that she's certainly not forgotten by our family members all of whom still listen to and enjoy her melodious music. Her voice is second to none. She may be old but certainly not forgotten.
Posted by aashishsharma on (November 16 2009, 03:49 AM GMT)@Shen_Mark, what an absolute joke! You honestly think that Sri Lanka can win 3-0? You'll need to retrieve your head from the clouds son! The only thing we can guarantee is that there will be high quality cricket on display with two of the greats, Sachin and Murali going at eachother.
Posted by mysay on (November 16 2009, 03:14 AM GMT)C'Mon Mr. Indian Blokes, play it nice. Say it will be a good contest and end it at that. You guys might win the first and then you guys will give your team all the glory and when they lose one, there will be so many critics who will want every Indian player dropped and also several coments calling India a highly overrated team, which I think is the only fact that is correct. You guys who talk about winning is SA & Australia, how many tests have we been given in those countries?? Sure India will get 5 - 7 if they want, as Indian media rakes in the $$$ for the ICC and the hosting country, sadly not all countries have that. However I guess not having that is what keeps most of the teams down to earth, the least that can be said about the Indians.
Posted by manojper on (November 16 2009, 02:39 AM GMT)Sidharth Monga - If you're referring to Lata Mangeshkar as "old forgotten" supersinger, you've no idea what you are talking about. I know this is not cricket related, but get your facts straight man. Have no desire to read your article further. Wish you stop writing and do some reading first.
Posted by deepblue22 on (November 16 2009, 02:20 AM GMT)DrDonaLolo ..it seems you have forgotten the 3 consecutive times tendulkar was wrongly given out lbw in the last odi series against SL in SL.
Posted by DrDonaLolo on (November 15 2009, 23:17 PM GMT)With a referral system, Sri Lanaka is far better team than india and they will beat india very easily but if there is no referral system then we all can guess what could be the result of this series. I think that the innovation of the referral system was a good one to try to clamp out the blatant mistakes that occurred in the past especially against the smaller and weaker nations. Without the referral system umpires will be more inclined to give decisions in favor of the more established stronger nations which means that stronger nations are inherently favored. Umpires are so affraid to give Tendulkar and Ponting lbw out, 100s of times these two batsmen were plumb lbw out but they were not given out.
Posted by Sameerb on (November 15 2009, 20:11 PM GMT)This series will be a draw. With the way Indians are playing they have to gift away atleast one test match. I am sure the old stalwarts will have a good series (I hope they actually make good use of this series) Hope the curators are reading this...
Posted by samdroy on (November 15 2009, 16:40 PM GMT)And @Shen_Mark do you honestly believe any visiting team (however talented) has any chance of beating India 3-0 in India? It's so laughable, that Ricky Ponting, Steve Waugh, Mark Taylor, Graeme Smith and Hansie Cronje (though he did win a 2-test series 2-0 but then Tendulkar was captain and team was in a mess after a absolute whitewash in Oz) would laugh in ur face.
Posted by samdroy on (November 15 2009, 16:31 PM GMT)Though I am an Indian I would definitely say this, The Sri Lankan team is more talented than the Indians. But at the test level they are yet to prove it, having not won a single test in either Australia, SA or India. Also when the pitches are not flat or slow turner does any Sri Lankan batsman (apart from Jayawardene or Sangakkara) have what it takes to build a fine innings (though such a situation is unlikely to arise in India more likely in SA and Aus) ? And the most intriguing question for the series if the ball starts to reverse (I definitely hope so) can the the Sri Lankans play Zaheer ?(Zaheer is the best bowler in the world with the reverse swinging SG ball; believe it or not.)
Posted by cric_follower on (November 15 2009, 16:12 PM GMT)This should have been a four-five test match series, with no one-dayers. High time people got some break from one-day matches. Even die hard fans have had too much, can't imagine how jaded the players will be, especially the ones who play all three formats.