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'Spin strategies take centre stage'
Match facts
March 2-6, Hyderabad
Start time 9.30am (0400GMT
Start time 9.30am (0400GMT
Big Picture
The clinical victory in Chennai marked a job well begun by
India, but MS Dhoni's side won't be too thrilled yet, having lost the previous
series against England despite taking a 1-0 lead. England's fortunes turned
with the inclusion of the extra spinner in Monty Panesar for the second Test in
Mumbai, and Australia's team management have also been pondering whether to
switch to a two-spinner policy, which has historically not worked too well for
them in India.
What could prompt Australia to stick to their pace-heavy
line-up will be that left-arm spinner Xavier Doherty's Test credentials aren't
in the same league as Panesar 's, evidenced by an unflattering first-class
average of 44.56.
India Vs Australia Second Test |
India, too, have been wondering about an additional tweaker,
though in their case it will expand their spin trio to a quartet. Pragyan Ojha,
the left-arm spinner, was perhaps India's best bowler in the series defeat to
England but was surprisingly left out in the first Test. India's quicks had
little to do in Chennai, and Ojha could take one of their places.
Though Ojha is the latest in a long line of Hyderabad players
to have played Tests for India, the city has not been a traditional venue for
Test cricket, having only hosted three matches till 2009. Tests returned to
Hyderabad in 2010 at the new Rajiv Gandhi International Stadium, and the
Australia match will be the third in Hyderabad in three years. It is the only
Indian stadium to get two Tests this season, benefitting after the Australians
complained about the facilities in the original host city, Kanpur. Briefly
there were concerns that the match might be moved out of Hyderabad as well,
after powerful bomb blasts hit the city just over a week ago. Security has been
tightened before the match, with two units of an elite anti-terror squad
deployed, and 60 CCTVs being used to monitor the stadium and surroundings.
Form guide
India WDLLW (Last five matches, most recent first)
Australia LWWWL
Australia LWWWL
Watch out for...
In Chennai, James Pattinson once again showed why
he's rated so highly by Australia's team management, bowling with ferocious
pace to fluster India's batsmen and finishing comfortably the best of the
Australia's fast bowlers. Pattinson has a tendency to break down, though, and
was used only in two short bursts of three overs each early in the first
innings. Can his body handle the intensity of back-to-back Tests?
Pattinson dismissed the opener M Vijay cheaply in
both innings. The Chennai Test was Vijay's first chance in more than 18 months,
and failure in the second Test could relegate him to the sidelines again. With
Gautam Gambhir out of the squad, runs in Hyderabad might open the way to a long
run in the side for Vijay. He didn't have the best of Ranji seasons - making
only 138 at 17.25 in five matches - but will be hoping to capture the form that
brought him centuries in both Irani Cup (a first-class Indian domestic match,
which pits the Ranji champions against a Rest of India side) games this season.
Teams news
After the Chennai victory, MS Dhoni had talked about India
having found a 'settled' side, indicating that there aren't likely to be too
many changes. The only decision the team management will have to make is
whether to bring in Ojha, and if so, at whose expense.
India: (probable) 1 Virender Sehwag, 2 M Vijay, 3
Cheteshwar Pujara, 4 Sachin Tendulkar, 5 Virat Kohli, 6 Ravindra Jadeja, 7 MS
Dhoni (capt & wk), 8 R Ashwin, 9 Harbhajan Singh, 10 and 11 Bhuvneshwar
Kumar/ Ishant Sharma/Pragyan Ojha
Unlike Chennai, where Australia confidently announced their
XI well before the match, they have yet to name their team for Hyderabad. The
batting is unlikely to change, unless David Warner fails to recover from his
bout of gastro. Though their coach Mickey Arthur suggested that, in hindsight,
Australia should have played two spinners in Chennai, it is expected that they
will play only Lyon as the specialist slow bowler.
India Vs Australia Second Test Sachin Tendulkar |
Australia: 1 David Warner, 2 Ed Cowan, 3 Phillip Hughes,
4 Shane Watson, 5 Michael Clarke (capt), 6 Matthew Wade (wk), 7 Moises
Henriques, 8 Peter Siddle, 9 Mitchell Starc/Mitchell Johnson/Xavier Doherty, 10
James Pattinson, 11 Nathan Lyon
Pitch and conditions
It will be hotter in Hyderabad than in Chennai, with the
temperature predicted to be around 35C in the afternoons. There is no rain
forecast over the next week. The pitch is expected to provide help for the
spinners, though it should have more in it for the quick bowlers than the
turner in Chennai as it is a harder surface.
Stats and trivia
In his previous innings, Dhoni moved into the top 10 among
six-hitters in Test cricket, going past Kevin Pietersen. He has cleared the
ropes 75 times in Tests, and needs 26 more to break the all-time record held by
Adam Gilchrist
Peter Siddle's bowling strike-rate of
41.6 is the best by an Australian against India
Quotes
"When you go onto a ground, you have a good feeling if
you have done well before over there … [you have] a good positive
mindset."
R Ashwin took 12 wickets in his previous Test in Hyderabad
R Ashwin took 12 wickets in his previous Test in Hyderabad
"Spin formula India's best bet''
An American football coach once had the basic principle of
sports writing explained to him by a reporter: "When you lose, we make fun
of you. When you win, we make fun of the other guy."
Much fun, therefore, is being made of Australia's bloopers in
the Chennai Test and
India are spared the pincushion treatment for now. They would hope the respite
lasts for another few months at least.
Victory in the Chennai Test has brought relief rather than
fist-pumping 'payback' celebration. Three Tests and three months of
introspection lay between India's last Test victory in Ahmedabad against
England and the Chennai Test. This was a victory they needed as much as they
wanted. It was eked out through a fairly simple formula, one that India hopes
will keep working through the rest of the series.
India Vs Australia Second Test Photos |
Chennai was dusted and done, in that order, 90 minutes into
day five. After MS Dhoni's brutal double-century on Sunday, the Indian spinners
brought their brand of business into play on day four. R Ashwin, Harbhajan
Singh and Ravinder Jadeja ran through the Australian batting on a track that
spat, bit and either leapt with venom or sizzled with zip.
This is the way this series is going to go, in all
likelihood. The focus is on pitches that will allow India to successfully play
three spinners, including Jadeja. As long as their batsmen can hold out (Dhoni
did far more than hold out in Chennai, he led a surge) and the inexperienced
Australians keep sweating, India will control the series.
It is, it appears, India's best chance of securing a result
that stays true to script and overturns their own overturning by England.
Before Chennai, India's last Test victory had come on a
sluggish surface and led to complaints about the man-hours and sweat-buckets
required by India's spinners to get 20 wickets. The turner that was demanded,
rather openly, backfired on them in Mumbai after
England re-grouped, played Monty Panesar ahead
of Tim Bresnan and roared back.
The only similarity between Panesar and Australia's Xavier Doherty is that they are
quickish left-arm spinners. Doherty is more of a limited-overs specialist and,
not surprisingly, Panesar has played over 100 first-class matches more than
him. India will be on the lookout for any copycat approaches from Australia
which, if unsuccessful, will no doubt be mocked too.
So far so good. Chennai was originally the
venue of the fourth and final Test of the series. The venues were switched
around to open the series in the south when it was decided that Hyderabad would
host the second Test instead of Kanpur (Cricket Australia had expressed dissatisfaction
over the facilities in Kanpur). The ideal script for India would be Australia
heading into a north Indian spring, in Mohali and Delhi, 0-2 down.
VVS Laxman's succinct
description on television of what the pitch in his home town for the second
Test would be was "hard, firm and crumbling". In the previous Test played in Hyderabad,
New Zealand were beaten soon after tea on the fourth day, with Ashwin and Ojha
taking 18 of the 20 wickets.
Word from the Indian camp is that injury to one quick bowler
after another meant that spin became the only 20-wicket option available to the
hosts for this series. One tally even has the number of injured at ten but in
real terms the list includes Zaheer Khan, Umesh Yadav, Varun Aaron, Vinay
Kumar, Irfan Pathan and a fittish RP Singh (who comes with wishful longing for
a 2007 version).
The Chepauk track was called 'decent' by Dhoni and 'typically
Indian' by Jadeja, while Clarke said it "looked a lot worse than it
played". There were 1243 runs and 32 wickets over four-and-a-bit days,
evidence, it was said, of its perfectly respectable nature. What cannot be
denied though is that - barring Pattinson's manful effort in the first innings
- the pitch largely favoured a type of bowler, rather than give both quicks and
slow men their moments over five days.
Ironically, the species of bowler Chennai favoured is the
kind that is sadly going out of vogue in India to the point that the national
selectors couldn't find a surprise newcomer to throw into the mix. Laxman's
estimate of the number of quality spinners - and he knew how to play them - in
the country numbered at "seven or eight", rather than the "two
or three per domestic team" that he remembered running into in the 1990s.
To say that a dry, slow, crumbling, unpredictable pitch
equates to what other sides do - play to the home team's 'strength' - is
somewhat misleading. If India had more confidence in the spinners they consider
their 'strength', the surfaces would not require, as the Chennai curator
delightfully explained in
the Indian Express on Wednesday morning, "selective
watering". This is more a reflection of India's limited options and the
weakness of a new, raw generation of Australian batsmen. And not wanting to be
made fun of.
'I missed bowling in Chennai' – Watson
If Shane Watson's commitment to playing as a
batsman only on this tour was ever going to be tested, standing in the field
for 154.3 overs during India's the first innings in Chennai was the time. As
the runs piled up for India and Australia's attack struggled for impact they
missed Watson's bowling, and Watson missed being part of it. But he said while
the possibility of bowling later on the tour had crossed his mind, he knew that
for the sake of his fitness and form, he had to stick to his plan.
Over the past few years in Test cricket, Watson has had a
happy knack of breaking partnerships and an unhappy habit of breaking down. His
most recent injury, the problem with his left calf that ruled him out of the
third Test against Sri Lanka in January and the one-day series that followed,
prompted him to declare that he would give up bowling for the Test tour of
India to concentrate on his batting, and on stringing together as much cricket
as he could.
India Vs Australia Second Test Hyderabad |
Having missed the whole of the previous Australian Test
summer due to calf and hamstring injuries, and then the Brisbane and Adelaide
Tests against South Africa, Watson decided his best option was to temporarily
give up bowling. As India's batsmen put on a series of frustrating partnerships
in Chennai, Watson was itching to take the ball and he said the experience had
confirmed in his mind that giving up bowling would not be a permanent move.
"That was a time that reaffirmed to me that I do want to
bowl," Watson said. "That was a time where if I hadn't have made the
decision not to bowl for this tour that I could have had some input on the game
at a crucial time in the match. That to me was the first time over the last
month since I came back that I missed bowling.
"The decision I made is more a longer-term decision to
get some running and conditioning into my legs, so when I start bowling again,
my body has more chance of handling it. I do appreciate the decision but it
certainly reaffirmed to me that I'm never going to give up bowling. It excites
me having some input on the game, especially when what I do could have an
influence on a certain part of the game."
For the time being, Watson's plan is to resume bowling during
the second half of the IPL with the ultimate goal of being able to contribute
with the ball during Australia's Ashes tour of England in July and August. He
said while the thought of bowling at some point on the Indian tour was tempting
- he has taken 12 wickets at 33.41 in his past six Tests in the country - he
was resigned to the fact that his existing plan was a better long-term idea.
"That thought has gone through my mind a few times but I
suppose we do have to stay on course," Watson said. "There were
reasons why I made that decision - to try and get my body conditioned enough to
get back into my bowling.
"I know I've needed two or three months just to be able
to get some conditioning into my body, to then hopefully hold together for the
next period of time once I get back bowling again. There is a big reason why
I'm not bowling at the moment - in between the Test matches to get some running
into my legs to continue to build that resilience, so I can hopefully just stay
together."
In committing to his long-term plan to stay on the field,
Watson took advice from Cricket Australia's medical staff as well as his
personal physio, Viktor Popov, and it was made after discussing the idea with
the captain Michael Clarke. The bowling issue came to a head after the Hobart Test against Sri Lanka,
when Watson bowled 47.4 overs, easily the most he had ever sent down in a game,
and he struggled with his calf in the next Test.
"I took a lot of information in at the time, especially
through the summer having the same calf injury again and also the amount I
bowled in Hobart, that was the most I've ever bowled in my career in four or
five-day cricket," Watson said. "I knew my body could handle it, it
was more so backing up to handle it again. I had to get the right conditioning
in my legs, things like running technique, doing all those things to give
myself a better chance to hold together my body when I'm bowling.
"But I also need to be more careful in the future about
the overs I do bowl. One, I have the chance to do it more consistently and have
less chance of injury but also there were times when it affected my batting,
more so in Test cricket over the last 12 to 18 months, especially when I was
opening. There were a number of reasons why I made that decision, most
importantly is trying to score some runs in Test cricket as well."
To that end, Watson has been working in the nets on his
footwork, with the intention of being able to come down the pitch to India's
spinners rather than simply playing back as he has on previous tours of India.
He made 84 and 60 during the warm-up match against India A and showed
encouraging glimpses in the first Test but was unable to build a big score,
falling for 28 in the first innings and 17 in the second.
Chennai knock Dhoni's best – Chappell
Former Australia captain Greg Chappell has rated MS Dhoni's
double-century in Chennai as his best in Tests.
Dhoni's knock of 224 tilted the scales in India's favour, according to
Chappell, and helped them to a 1-0 lead in the four-match series against Australia.
"He has played several memorable knocks in one-day
cricket, but this was the best I have seen him play in Test matches,"
Chappell told The Times of India.
"I have seen him smack a yorker-length delivery from
James Anderson for a six. It requires special talent. His success on a
crumbling Chennai track stems from his ability to strike the ball hard on
pitches where the ball tends to keep low. Had he scored just 124, the match
would still have been in the balance. The manner in which he attacked a tiring
Australian attack, shielding the tailenders, truly makes him a
match-winner."
This was India's seventh win in the last 21 Tests, five of
which have come against West Indies and New Zealand. India lost eight
consecutive overseas Tests, and conceded a series at home to England for the
first time in 28 years. Chappell accepted that the Indian team looked average
on their tour of Australia last
summer but maintained that Dhoni's captaincy shouldn't be under doubt.
"It is true that the Indian team under Dhoni looked
below par during their tour Down Under, but he has answered his critics in the
best possible way. In my book he remains the best man to lead India in all
forms of the game.
India Vs Australia Second Test Livestreaming in Hyderabad |
"At a time when players all over the world are
struggling to cope with their workload, it is amazing how Dhoni manages to play
every game with the same intensity. That he has done it successfully now for
five years speaks volumes about Dhoni's fitness, mental strength as well as his
commitment. India are lucky to have him."
Although Australia crumbled under Dhoni's onslaught to
eventually lose by eight wickets, a few of their players had impressed. One of
them was the debutant Moises Henriques, who scored
half-centuries in both innings, finishing with an unbeaten 81 in the second dig
to help prevent an innings defeat. In Henriques, Chappell saw the makings of a
long-term allrounder.
"It was good to see Henriques coming good at last. He
has been on the fringe for a while. I hope he can be the allrounder that
Australia have been looking for, particularly after a question mark over Shane
Watson's ability to contribute with the ball."
Regardless of the result of the first Test, Chappell felt the
series wouldn't be one-sided.
"It will be a close series, but thanks to Dhoni, India
do have a significant advantage."
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