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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Tuesday, September 04, 2001 |
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Indians fail to learn from mistakes
If the Indians perform well in one match, the chances of them
failing in the next are high. Such is the inconsistency of this
Indian team that it keeps failing abysmally while facing pressure
situations. And the sad thing is that they have not learnt from
the mistakes. Sadder still when they continue to cave in so
meekly.
The failure of the middle order was the prime reason for the
defeat against the Sri Lankans in the final Test match at
Colombo. The openers gave a good start in both the innings and
after that Indians lost way. I am happy the way the openers went
about their job.
The Indians lost the Test once they were bowled out for less than
300 in the first innings, especially on a good batting wicket. A
batting disaster, indeed.
One man army - Muttiah Muralitharan destroyed the much-hyped
Indian batting line-up in the first innings. It is a joy to watch
him bowl. I still fail to fathom how he sports that harmless
smile even after bowling marathon spell. Surely, he is a
phenomenon. A bowler who could turn the ball on any surface.
Without doubt, Murali is one of the best off-spinners in the
world.
The Indians are supposed to be good players of spin bowling and
Muralitharan made a mockery of that claim. Let's get this
straight. The Coca-Cola Test series has exposed the Indians for
what they are - a bunch of pedestrian cricketers.
On the other hand, the Lankans are more determined, passionate
about their cricket. Marvan Atapattu showed that in ample
measure. Struggling for runs, woefully out of form, Atapattu came
good when his team desperately needed it. A man like Atapattu is
what India wants. It is the kind of innings that any captain
would love to see.
The Indians were literally buried under the Lankans' run feast
and were not able to come out of it. It was sheer lack of
confidence on the part of the bowlers that helped the Lankans
pile up runs. I still maintain it is the middle order batsmen who
let India down.
Another problem with the Indian players is their mindset. They
think the earlier matches have to be forgotten as a bad dream,
and not as an opportunity to look back and improve. The defeat
should pain each and every member of the team and should force
them to analyse what went wrong in the series and take steps to
set them right. A long term planning is what India desperately
requires. If we keep ignoring the mistakes, it is bound to
repeat.
K. Srikkanth
www.krishsrikkanth.com
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Section : Sport Previous : We were good in patches: Ganguly Next : Hyderabad labours to victory | |
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