New Zealand vs India 2014: 1st Test - 5 takeaways from another defeat for Team India
Well, if the 0-4 battering in the 5-match ODI series wasn’t enough, Dhoni’s men went down by 40 runs in the 1st Test match at Auckland, and have handed an unassailable 1-0 lead to a spirited New Zealand side, which refuses to be beaten.
The story of the first two days of the Test match was abominable for every Indian cricket fanatic to swallow, but a stellar show from the fast bowling trio of Mohammed Shami, Ishant Sharma and Zaheer Khan on the 3rd day of the Test match gave India a glimmer of a chance to pull off the unthinkable.
After India were bowled out for a paltry 202 in their first innings, Brendon McCullum decided not to enforce the follow-on, a move, which later seemed to be a sabotage of all the good work done by the Blackcaps up until then. In the end though, McCullum not enforcing the follow-on didn’t prove contentious as far as New Zealand were concerned, and once again ended up as the victorious side in a great contest between bat and ball.
That being said, here are the 5 things I learned from another defeat in overseas conditions for Team India.
Team India again lost a game that was totally within their grasp
Has been the story of the tour so far, hasn’t it? Team India need to be applauded for their tenacity to bounce back from precarious situations right throughout the tour of New Zealand, but the final touches or the finishing touches haven’t come through on even a single occasion.
The first Test match was yet another story of fighting your way back into the game from a position of virtual death, but just when it seemed like Team India would prevail, it didn’t quite pan out that way.
Chasing 407 was always going to be daunting task, but having got to a position of 222-2, and with two Delhi batsmen in Virat Kohli and Shikhar Dhawan playing beautifully, you’d have to say that it was India’s game to lose, and not New Zealand’s game to win.
Looking back on the Test match, it’s obvious that the 1st overseas Test win remains elusive after 11 attempts in the last 3 years.
Ravindra Jadeja’s ability remains a mystery and appalling
Yes indeed. There are two dimensions to this whole thing. One is that Jadeja, if he can curb his instinctive maneuvers that smidgen bit, he can prove to be a match-winner. Jadeja is a hot property in the way international cricket is played today.
He can bowl splendidly, field acrobatically, and can use the long-handle to more than very good effect. Albeit, he’s still a bits and pieces cricketer, he’s exhilarating to watch. So, it remains a mystery as to what he might render when he’s in the thick of things.
Walking in at 270-6, and India requiring 137 more, who on earth would have expected Jadeja to come up with a cameo like that. He thrashed the New Zealand bowling attack to all parts of the ground, and as you started to get intoxicated by this ‘Jadeja Storm’, it culminated with a rash shot, which typically signifies the appalling maneuver that the headline talks about.
Rohit Sharma’s body language is annoying
This was a monotonic criticism on Rohit Sharma up until the beginning of 2013, when he finally decided to show the world that he has learnt, and more importantly he was hungry to play to his potential.
But then, his dismissals in both the innings of the 1st Test match against New Zealand certainly suggests me that the ‘Rohit Sharma of old’ is starting to resurface yet again, and if you’re MS Dhoni, that’s the last thing you want to see from your premier batsman.
Not bringing down his bat in time to a completely benign delivery in the 1st innings must have made him aware of the bad habits that might be invading his system again, but his dismissal in the second innings pinned India into submission almost. First ball after tea, and with India placed as they were, Rohit Sharma had to be responsible and alive to the situation. He wasn’t concentrating, and played a vague shot outside his off-stump to gift his scalp to Tim Southee and New Zealand.