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The pressure is off, the expectations are low, so
anything creditable will be a refreshing bonus for India in this contest in Mumbai.
Once again they have faltered under the weight of expectation even though this
time they have really valid reasons for moderate performances as a team.
Their injury toll has been horrific at an hour when
they could least afford it. I doubt even Australia could expect to win without
two strike bowlers, their captain and a star batsman who hasn?t lifted a bat for
two months against a team full of confidence and brilliance.
Form deserts a percentage of every team but to foresee
Dravid and Laxman?s misery was impossible and it has been damaging. Let?s not
fool ourselves, Australia were clear favourites in this series and the result
has surprised no one.
New blood for the fourth Test without the stress of
worrying about the result should ensure some spark returns to the lifeless outfit
that has been India. Laxman nailed an amazing century in Sydney years ago after
the result mattered little so I hope he can do that again and have all others
follow, to provide an appropriate finale to this series.
For these reasons I think this will be the easiest
of the four Tests for India to play, unless they continue to worry about their
position in the team, continually watching over their shoulder for approaching
traffic.
Little is expected of newly-selected players and this
is the best platform from which to launch long careers. Many a career has started
from outside the radar screens. Go for it, play hard and enjoy the fight but demonstrate
plenty of ability to perform the tasks that are your job.
To perform your job you need to know what it is and
this communication between the team prior to playing must improve. After discovering
what it is that the team expects of a rookie, he must accept the responsibility
of owning that role so that he can get close to performing it every day. Once
these aspects are crystal clear, a youngster can set about enjoying his cricket.
Jason Gillespie has referred to Australia?s superior
planning for the series and it is that absolute clarity of role that has allowed
them to perform their facets of play magnificently as individuals.
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| This game should see a better-equipped Sachin
Tendulkar at the wicket |
Critics of the team?s planning in Australia last summer
were continually refuted by the team saying they had been outplayed by a rampaging
India but everything else was spot on.
Interesting now there is an admission that maybe those
critics were onto something at a time when things could have been remedied. Great
to have clarity of role but there should also be a flexibility to adapt when things
aren?t so smooth and before critics feel the need to be involved.
This Australian team has addressed the issue of dead
Tests and some past average performances, but will need to muster some real guts
to maintain the stellar standards of the first three Tests in India.
The desire to remain unbeaten and performing to the
current levels must come from the individual and not a team meeting.
One of Australia?s great skills is their ability to
treat every single appearance for the country as special. With workloads increasing
it would be easy to develop a club mentality whereby an underachievement here
or there can be tolerated but tournaments and series are still won.
The Australian team is so much more than a club and
efforts to approach perfection in every outing are part and parcel of the philosophy.
India must see them as a little vulnerable though.
Having experienced the relief of wrapping this one up so early, Australia have
to gather all their toughness and aggression when they are feeling so content.
This game should see a better-equipped Sachin Tendulkar
at the wicket. All the questions he would have been asking himself about the injury
withstanding five days and how he would feel at the crease have been answered.
It is great credit to the man that as soon as he could lift a bat he made himself
available knowing how short on form he was going to be. Time in the middle is
crucial to batting form and he had had none of it for three months.
In 2001, it was one bowler and a classy batting order
that saw India beat Australia in the series. This year, India have had neither
for long enough and Harbhajan?s absence from Nagpur was a killer blow. If India
are to own their individual roles then they must find some consistent performers
who spend quality time in the team.
It is not acceptable to see injured unavailable players
sitting around with the team during home Tests. This merely makes it harder for
new blood to fully commit to their roles that need to be based on simplicity and
repetition.
Unavailable players must return home where they can
reassess their desire to perform for their country from an appropriate distance,
not feel as if they are still part of it ? captain or not. (PTI)
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