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New Zealand vs India 2014 - Lessons from Auckland Test for Team India

India’s winless streak overseas continues

The sharp contrast between India’s dream run in 2013 and the present stretch of win-less overseas campaigns is unmistakeable now – for within a period of two months spent gruelling for a seemingly non-existent forlorn victory in South Africa and now in New Zealand, the once buoyant Indian team has been transmogrified into a unit of neophytes struggling to cope with the demands of international cricket.

Needless to say, MS Dhoni‘s boys – who flew into New Zealand a month ago, strongly entertaining hopes of eradicating the strategic blemishes in South Africa – have found it excruciatingly difficult to manoeuvre their home-sick minds into realising that they have substantially unused potential to leave a few victorious footprints on the foreign shores.

With a 40 run defeat in the Auckland Test that resulted after four days of tumult between the bat and the ball, India have now entered their 926th day of wilderness, perpetuated by the absence of an overseas Test victory. India’s last Test win, away from home, came way back in 2011 against the West Indies in Kingston.

Let us analyse the Auckland defeat more closely here, without throwing too many unfounded jibes at the beleaguered Indians for not being able to live up to their status of being one of the top ranked sides in both the longer and shorter formats of the game.

Spinners overseas – a gap yet to be filled

While the usual suspects in weak bowling and spineless batting against the viciously swinging ball may form good enough alibi for generalising the trauma that India routinely faces away from home, the recent tour of South Africa as well as the ongoing one in New Zealand have imparted lessons that are vital enough to reconsider our approach in dissecting India’s latest overseas performances.

While the jury may still be out on whether India has the bowling prowess to decimate oppositions in their own dens, the ongoing stretch of debacles is centred upon something that only a nuanced scrutiny of the two month-long ordeal can reveal.

Even though analysts generally tend to attribute the overwhelming majority of problems in the team to its weak bowling credentials, some other grave, yet allegedly considered ‘minor’ issues have also had their say in making an otherwise strongly built unit vulnerable to the vagaries of overseas inclemency. And the last two months have been strongly representative of the fact that those minority reports can no longer be ignored and need to be highlighted with express urgency.

The transformation in the Indian side, over the last few years, has brought about a number of interesting changes in its paraphernalia – the spot of the wicket-keeper and the all-rounder hogging the limelight for a considerable period of time before MS Dhoni and Ravindra Jadeja answered their respective calls of duty with an appreciable degree of conviction.

And it is the establishment of the all rounder’s place in the side that has created a conundrum for the team management. Let’s keep ODIs and T20s out of our present discussion, for the addition of a hail and hearty ‘Sir’ to the team has been nothing short of invaluable for India. In Tests, however, it is a different story.

Consider the changes that the spot occupied by Jadeja in the Test team has undergone in the last ten years – earlier, legends by the name of Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh used to jostle for the spinner’s spot when the team wanted to go in with a three pacer-one spinner attack; this tradition slowly gave way to Ravichandran Ashwin virtually holding complete sway over that coveted spot and doing spectacularly well with the bat as well as the spinning ball before venturing out of subcontinent a couple of years ago.

Ashwin’s overseas struggles are big enough to question his place in the side

Ashwin’s fallacies and deficiencies came to light and were quickly identified as incorrigible enough to question his place in the team as the lead spinner – this inevitably paved the way for Ravindra Jadeja to stroll into the Test team, on the back of strong ODI performances in the last one year in his kitty.

Casting aside discussion on Jadeja’s hard work and achievements in the recent past, think about the revolutionary change that the Kumble à Bhajji à Ashwin à Jadeja chain has brought about in the dynamics of the Indian team.

While Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh used to be India’s patented wicket takers in all venues on Earth, Ashwin and Jadeja have at best been able to represent themselves as ‘agents of refreshment’ in the Indian bowling, giving the jaded pacers time to refresh themselves after tiring spells.

The question of having someone effective enough, other than the three pacers, to take wickets and break crucial partnerships has practically flown out of the window of the Indian team management at present.

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