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Rediff.com  » Cricket » Preview: Dhoni's Team India looking to turn new page in England
This article was first published 9 years ago

Preview: Dhoni's Team India looking to turn new page in England

July 08, 2014 18:03 IST

Image: MS Dhoni of India in action during a India nets session at Trent Bridge on Monday
Photographs: Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

Devoid of experience but propped up by a confident bunch of youngsters, India will be looking to wipe off scars of the past and reverse their poor overseas record when they take on England in a five-Test series, starting in Nottingham, on Wednesday.

It is a great opportunity for a young visiting side as they play five back-to-back Tests in this hectic 42-day series.

The next four Tests will be played at London (Lord's), Southampton, Manchester and London again (The Oval).

Under Mahendra Singh Dhoni, India's last overseas Test win was against the West Indies at Kingston in June 2011. Since then the team has lost 0-8 in two tours, to England and Australia.

A new overseas journey began in the 2013-14 season, which saw them play four overseas Tests in South Africa and New Zealand. But they couldn't get back to winning ways, losing two and drawing two matches.

- ...

England Test squad not as lethal as in 2011

Image: England's Stuart Broad, James Anderson and Alastair Cook during an England nets session on Monday
Photographs: Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

That, however, isn't the only fact hurting Indian cricket. Their Test form against England has really seen a downward curve in the last two encounters, as after the 0-4 embarrassment, they suffered a humiliating 1-2 loss at home in the 2012-13 season.

It was the first series win for England in India since 1984-85, one that marked their ascendancy in modern-day Test cricket.

However, things have changed a lot for the hosts since then. Their current Test squad bears a dissimilar look to those that dismantled India with such ease in their last two meetings.

Cricketers who really shone in those encounters are either in the midst of poor form or fatigue -- Alastair Cook, Stuart Broad, James Anderson -- while some -- Kevin Pietersen, Graeme Swann, Jonathan Trott -- have vanished from the scene altogether.

The combination of Anderson and Swann, with ample support from Broad, Tim Bresnan and Monty Panesar at different times, proved lethal for India on both previous occasions.

- ...

Additional burden on medium pacers Anderson and Broad

Image: James Anderson and Stuart Broad of England look on during an England nets session on Tuesday
Photographs: Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

Whether away or at home, there was no respite for their batsmen as quality pace and swing, backed up by some sensational spin bowling caused havoc in their ranks.

The duo accounted for 34 out of 79 Indian wickets to fall in the summer of 2011, while their tally went up to 32 out of 55 dismissals in the winter of 2012-13.

Swann's absence is hurting England because they now have to play an additional seam bowler while off-setting the spin duties to Moeen Ali, a move that hasn't invoked much confidence.

It means additional burden on their primary medium pacers, Anderson and Broad. But if the recent trend of placid wickets -- like the ones at both Lord's and Headingley in the recent first home series-loss to Sri Lanka -- continues, the hosts will find that taking 20 wickets will not be an easy proposition.

- ...

Cook has been out of runs and questions have been raised over his captaincy

Image: Captain Alastair Cook looks on during an England nets session at Trent Bridge in Nottingham on Monday
Photographs: Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

Bowlers need the cushion of runs to take wickets in Test cricket and Cook's form is the great worry herein. The English captain has now gone 24 innings without crossing the triple-figure mark and the visitors can look at this fact with some joy.

In their last two meetings, Cook buried the Indian bowling under an avalanche of runs -- 910 runs in eight Tests (14 innings).

While he searches for runs at the present moment, his captaincy has suffered and he has come under severe criticism from many quarters, a point of possible exploitation for Dhoni and his men.

Pietersen was the other great scorer for England in those two encounters -- 533 runs in 2011 and 338 runs in 2012-13 -- and that chapter is more or less closed now.

With Trott missing, it puts great pressure on Ian Bell to become the second scoring pivot in this upcoming series as the batting line-up is otherwise replete with youngsters trying to fit in.

England are undergoing a massive transition at this moment and five Tests is ample opportunity for any side looking for a revenge job on them.

- ...

Kohli and Pujara have made a firm impression

Image: Virat Kohli of India during a nets session on Monday
Photographs: Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

If there is an R-word this Indian team is looking for, however, then it is redemption. The 18-man squad bears a completely different look to the one that toured in 2011 or played at home in 2012-13.

Only Dhoni, Gautam Gambhir and Ishant Sharma played here three summers ago, while the others who stepped into the team during the latter series were taking a first step in their respective international careers.

It provides an opportunity to break away from the past and build for the future, signalling an end to the long and painful transition period.

Dissociated with the sufferings of 2011 then, this side will look to build on the positives gained in South Africa and New Zealand.

The young batting line-up, bolstered by Virat Kohli and Cheteshwar Pujara, stood up in alien conditions and made a firm impression.

In eight innings on those two tours, India crossed the 300-mark on two occasions, going on to score 421 at Johannesburg and 438 at Wellington.

They should have won at least one and at most two of those four Tests, but the inability to take 20 wickets has hurt them badly.

It is this question that needs answering and in turn will ascertain the playing XI for this first Test in Nottingham.

 - ...

 

Binny may get his Test cap

Image: Stuart Binny of India talks to Rahul Dravid during a India nets session at Trent Bridge on Monday
Photographs: Matthew Lewis/Getty Images

For long, Dhoni has searched for a medium-pacer all-rounder to deploy overseas and Stuart Binny looks like the answer to his prayers.

The Karnataka player enjoyed a long work-out in the two practice games at Leicester and Derbyshire, ahead of the likes of Rohit Sharma and Ravicandran Ashwin.

These are the two players who will certainly miss out if Binny comes into consideration. Ashwin has been pushed to the bench by Ravindra Jadeja, who looks set to be retained as the lone spinner, with the TrentBridge wicket bearing a brownish tinge.

Meanwhile, Sharma has done little of note in the eight innings (one fifty) in South Africa and New Zealand, and it was noted that Rahane (one hundred and two fifties in South Africa and New Zealand) batted before him in the two practice games.

Despite his troubles in the warm-up matches, Ishant Sharma will probably be selected on account of his past experience in these conditions, with Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Mohammad Shami giving him company.

But a regular four-bowler attack might not cut it any more. If India do go in with five bowlers, it will be an early indication of their intent in this high-profile Test series.

Squads:

India: Mahendra Singh Dhoni (capt & wicketkeeper), Shikhar Dhawan, Murali Vijay, Gautam Gambhir, Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli, Ajinkya Rahane, Rohit Sharma, Ravindra Jadeja, Stuart Binny, Ravindrachandra Ashwin, Ishant Sharma, Mohammad Shami, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Ishwar Pandey, Pankaj Singh, Varun Aaron, Wriddhiman Saha.

England: Alastair Cook (captain), Moeen Ali, James Anderson, Gary Ballance, Ian Bell, Stuart Broad, Chris Jordan, Liam Plunkett, Matt Prior (wk), Sam Robson, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Chris Woakes.

Match starts at: 3.30pm IST.

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