Rediff Logo Cricket Banner Ads Find/Feedback/Site Index
HOME | CRICKET | DIARY | HEMANT KENKRE
March 12, 1998

NEWS
MATCH REPORTS
STAT SHEET
OTHER SPORTS
SLIDE SHOW
PEOPLE
DEAR REDIFF




Sachin's brilliance, Dravid's consistency, and all that...

send this story to a friend Hemant Kenkre

Sachin Tendulkar's brilliant knock in the second innings of the first Test against Australia took one's breath away.

One was immediately reminded of his innings against England at the same venue, in 1991, when he toyed with the attack to notch up his first hundred in India. The innings he played on that blamy day was one of pure aggression, and one remembers how he threw his wicket away almost as if he was bored with the proceedings, a la Vivian Richards.

As a senior India batsman commented, "Sachin played an innings of calculated aggression." If he had treated the English bowlers with utter contempt, Sachin decimated the Aussie attack with calculated precision.

It was circumstantial that India had to declare to try and force a win. The way he was batting, Sachin would have gone on to complete his first double ton in Test cricket and may also have gone for the 236 mark, much to the delight of Sunil Gavaskar.

If the 1991 knock was a thundering one, the latest innings has also signs that Tendulkar has decided that he does not intend gifting his wicket away. Knowing Sachin, he must have rued his first innings lapse and have done a lot of soul searching before he came out to bat for the second time.

The calculated aspect of the knock was evident in the manner he manhandled Shane Warne. The Australian leg spinner has redefined the line of attack by bowling into the rough and getting wickets by coercing the batsman to top edge an intended sweep, or bowling the batsman round his legs with prodigious spin.

Batsmen from South Africa, West Indies, New Zealand, England and even Pakistan have found this 'outside the leg stump into the rough' line of attack very unnerving.

Sachin, on the other hand, was aggressive from the very start and showed supreme mastery and control while hitting against the spin, into the midwicket region, or moving outside the leg stump to punch the ball through the covers after giving himself enough room. The crucial aspect, as pointed out by Gavaskar, was that he waited for the ball. And, if memory serves me right, it is this very aspect that Gavaskar has been trying to drill into him for a long time.

The media has billed this series as a Warne v/s Tendulkar extravaganza, which is ridiculous. The last time the West Indies were here, the series was promptly labelled as a tussle between Tendulkar and Brian Lara. All other players were incidental -- or so the hype held.

The whole thing has developed a rather farcical air -- and never was it more evident than at the end of the game, when mediapersons asked Tendulkar the silliest of questions, mostly about whether he found Warne to be a threat.

On another note, at the end of the first Test, one was relieved that Rahul Dravid did not let the disappointment of non-selection meted out to him earlier, affect him. He batted with grim determination and proved to all and sundry that he is still the best bet to play the role of anchor and that aberrations like non-selection etc. do not affect his concentration. It was a real treat to watch the way he handled the Aussie spin attack on a crumbling wicket.

Navjot Sidhu proved, once again, that he is a big match player. The genial Sardar did not get too many runs in the Ranji trophy matches but the moment he wore India colours he looked a different player. The real revelation, however, was Nayan Mongia. In a pre-match interview, Indian skipper Mohammed Azharuddin was quoted as saying that India was still missing a wicket-keeper of Syed Kirmani's class. Mongia's brilliant performance behind the sticks not only proved the skipper wrong, but would have also made Kirmani proud.

Though India is one up in the series, Mark Taylor has promised that his team would bounce back. He is well aware that, given a slightly helpful wicket, his seamers will be a different proposition for the Indian batsmen. He also knows that once Warne tastes blood, he will be a different bowler. Taylor, with years of experience in the sun, is well acquainted with the vagaries of the game and is too astute a captain to let a game slip once it is in his grasp.

India, though they have taken an early lead, must try hard and keep the pressure on the Aussies. It is imperative that they blood young Ajit Agarkar as soon as possible. Agarkar has, on the recent on-going trip to Pakistan, proved that he can be a force to reckon with, both with bat and ball. He has had better international exposure than most (including a few in the present Indian squad) and this is the right time for him to make a bow in Test cricket.

Like batsman, bowlers too are ruled by form. If one takes a peek into the past, one will see what happened to bowlers like Paras Mhambrey. The Mumbai seamer should have played for India when he was in peak form but was picked to tour England only a year later, and as expected, flopped miserably. Agarkar has done well in Sri Lanka, the Challenger Series and is now performing with panache in Pakistan.

On turning Indian tracks, it makes sense to pick Agarkar in place of the second seamer as he has the added advantage of being a much more accomplished batsman. But then, sense and selection are two different things altogether in the Indian cricket scenario. With Agarkar in the side, the Indian batting line up will be bolstered and Javagal Srinath will get a new ball bowling partner even if he may be required to bowl just 10 to 15 overs in the entire game.

Tailpiece:

Son: Dad, how come the Indian batsmen played Shane Warne so well?

Dad: Because he was sorted out.

Son: How did the Indian batsmen sort Warne out?

Dad: Because, someone in the Aussie camp split the bans!

Hemant Kenkre

Mail to Sports Editor

HOME | NEWS | BUSINESS | CRICKET | MOVIES | CHAT
INFOTECH | TRAVEL | LIFE/STYLE | FREEDOM | FEEDBACK