Thursday, 4 August 2011

India confident of bouncing back

India confident of bouncing back
Despite trailing 2-0 and with their world number one Test ranking at stake, India are quietly confident of turning the tables on a rampant England.
The visitors, despite suffering injury blows to Harbhajan Singh and Yuvraj Singh remain confident of fighting their way back in the remaining two Tests of the four-match series.
Even though the injuries and batting failures have hit India hard, Dhoni's men are not overlooking a few positives that emerged from the two defeats at Lord's and Trent Bridge.
"Bhai sahib, yahan match to jeetna hai (we have to win matches)," Praveen Kumar, who has so far taken 13 wickets from two Tests at an average of 26.53, said.
The Indians are clearly not ready to get caught up in the swirl of negatives floating around, and are working on strengthening their innner belief, something which could help them turn the tide in their favour.
They are keen to draw confidence from the fact that Sachin Tendulkar was not well at Lord's, Gautam Gambhir was laid low by an elbow injury, while Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman did little wrong in the last two Tests. Even Suresh Raina showed a glimpse of his ability.
There is also not a single pacer one can find fault with, even though off-spinner Harbhajan has failed miserably and "Bhajji bashing" started almost immediately.
Harbhajan, who is now ruled out of the Test series due to an abdominal strain, was being viewed as an unimaginative bowler and as somebody who wouldn't mind being injured at this stage of his career.
The off-spinner bowled just 13.4 overs in the second Test and has been woefully out of form in the series. The tweaker grabbed one for 69 in the second Test after his one for 218 in the first at Lord's. But the fact that even Graeme Swann equally struggled on a seamers' strip, has - it seems - been conveniently brushed under the carpet.
"We are very good at running down our own men. You break this team now and you would pay the price in Australia later this year. No spinner, other than (Shane) Warne, (Muttiah) Muralitharan and (Anil) Kumble, has taken more wickets than Harbhajan in the history of the game," said a former Indian captain, who is now a cricket commentator.
"And are Bhajji's critics implying that Warne, Murali and Kumble never had an ordinary series? Kumble averaged nearly 60 in his final three Test series. Warne is averaging nearly 50 in 14 Tests against India. And do you want to know what is Murali's average in India - over 45 in 11 Tests!" he added.
As far as Dhoni is concerned, he has also been a subject of similar attack. There is nothing that critics can find right with his batting, keeping or captaincy.
But the Indian team knows that it is not only him who has failed with the bat in the series but also England captain Andrew Strauss and Alastair Cook.
Dhoni's collection behind the stumps is faulted, even when the wickets have been uneven at times. There is a lack of respect for a man who has helped India reach the top of the Test ladder and stay there for 19 months.
Most of the members of the Indian cricket team have seen the highs and the lows in their careers and are experienced enough to not get bothered by all the criticism surrounding them at the moment.
Teams can and do lose a match and a series. But it must not be a trigger to stamp out the good cricketers. In long careers, players can have an aberration once in a while. It should not be a signal to take them off the roster.
An act in haste could be one of regret later. And the number one Test side in the world is desperate to prove critics wrong when they take on England in the last two Tests at Edgbaston and The Oval.

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