Upbeat India aim at increasing lead in Hyderabad

PTI Updated - December 07, 2021 at 01:09 AM.

Indian cricketers (from left) Ishant Sharma, Cheteshwar Pujara, Ravindra Jadeja and Harbhajan Singh during the practice session on the eve of 2nd test match between India and Australia at Rajiv Gandhi Stadium, Uppal in Hyderabad on Friday. Photo: K.R. Deepak

After a morale-boosting win clinched in the opening Test, a confident India will look to consolidate their position by putting up another dominant performance in the second cricket Test against Australia starting here tomorrow.

After putting the visitors on the mat, riding on Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s individual brilliance and an equally impressive show from off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin, the home team would aim to guard against complacency having learnt their lesson the hard way from the England series.

Dhoni and his men would be determined to ensure that Australians are not let off the hook like Alastair Cook’s England, who rallied to win the previous Test series 2-1.

The Indian captain’s superlative effort in Chennai could well turn into a series defining knock and his leading from the front is the shot in the arm that the team required as it was not performing as per expectations in the longer format.

The last time India played at the Rajiv Gandhi Stadium in Uppal, they inflicted a humiliating innings and 115-run defeat on New Zealand with Ashwin grabbing 12 for 85.

That particular match which ended on the fourth day could well have ended inside three days had weather not played spoilsport on the curtailed second and third day.

Therefore Team India will certainly not deviate from their ‘turning track template’ and Ashwin and co will certainly have a huge role to play again as the hosts look to go for the kill.

A 2-0 lead will not only push the Aussies back to the wall but it will also ensure that making a comeback in the four-Test series will be practically impossible for the visitors.

The hosts also have lesser worries regarding the team composition save whether they would be playing local boy Pragyan Ojha on his home ground.

Even though both Murali Vijay and Virender Sehwag flopped in Chennai, Dhoni and the team management are unlikely to tinker with the opening combination as he had indicated at the post match press conference after the first Test.

The Indian Captain has never been a firm believer in too much of chopping and changing and might just like to go in with the winning combination.

The middle-order picks itself and the question arises whether Ojha, who certainly got a raw deal in Chennai, gets to play in front of his home crowd.

Bowling combination is one area where Dhoni will need to put in some thought. While Ojha is a far better left-arm spinner than Ravindra Jadeja, the Saurashtra all-rounder did his cause no harm by picking five wickets in the first Test and complementing Ashwin well.

Harbhajan Singh was not at his best in the first innings but looked like hitting some form in the second innings where he got important wickets of David Warner and Matthew Wade.

Playing four spinners can be a luxury as was proved during the Nagpur Test against England as Piyush Chawla was the one who was underbowled in both innings.

But in order to put more pressure on Australia, that’s the only way to fit Ojha in at the expense of a pacer.

It is an open secret that Ishant Sharma and Bhuvneshwar Kumar do not have the ability to generate consistent reverse swing with the old ball and their pace is hardly troubling the Aussie batsmen with the new ball.

Dhoni might just be tempted to drop one among Ishant and Bhuvneshwar, who collectively sent down 33 overs in the first game with Ishant getting three in the second innings coming in to bowl in the 76th over. The debutant UP pacer did not get to bowl at all.

Bhuvneshwar, however, was praised for his patient knock which helped Dhoni reach his double century and give India a winning lead of 192 runs.

The Australians, on the other hand, will certainly be tempted to a play a second specialist spinner but even skipper Michael Clarke knows it all too well that neither Nathan Lyon is of Graeme Swann’s class nor does left-arm spinner Xavier Doherty possess the calibre of a Monty Panesar.

Published on March 1, 2013 12:52