Mobile app version of desicheers.com
Login or Join
IndiaNEWS

: Chappell points out not picking best team, batters based on one shot as blunders by Australia on India Test tour #IndiaNEWS #Sports New Delhi, Feb 25 (IANS) Former Australia cricket captain Greg Chappell

@IndiaNEWS

Posted in: #IndiaNEWS #Sports

Chappell points out not picking best team, batters based on one shot as blunders by Australia on India Test tour #IndiaNEWS #Sports
New Delhi, Feb 25 (IANS) Former Australia cricket captain Greg Chappell slammed the current team think-tank for being 2-0 behind in their ongoing Test tour of India, pointing out that the visitors made blunders by not picking their best team and batters basing their game on only one shot.
Australia cant win the Test series in India after going 2-0 behind in the four-match series. After losing the first Test by an innings and 132 runs in Nagpur, the visitors lost the second Border-Gavaskar Trophy Test by six wickets in New Delhi. They will now play their third Test in Indore, starting from March 1.
The Australian think-tank has made two major blunders: they didnt pick their best team and they based their batting attack on one shot. With Cameron Green, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood injured for the first two Tests, the Australians were hamstrung, but the basic premise of playing your best bowlers still holds true. Spin is not our strength, so Pat Cummins and Scott Boland were the right choices, but they needed to bowl more, wrote Chappell in his column for The Sydney Morning Herald on Saturday.
He was also critical of the bowling changes made by Australia for the New Delhi Test, where they left out Boland to play three spinners, with Cummins bowling only 13 overs in the first innings and not bowling at all in the second essay.
Not picking Boland for the second Test and electing to go with a spinner not ready for Test cricket was a fatal mistake. That Cummins under-bowled himself and failed to use the short ball on a wicket of variable bounce was another mistake. To complete the trifecta, it seems that no one saw fit to tell Cummins that he was under-bowling and that he should use the short ball.
In the second Test in New Delhi, Australia had the slight edge at the end of day two. But on day three, they became over-proactive and panicky when six batters, including Cummins and his deputy Steve Smith, fell while playing the sweep shot on a slow pitch with low bounce.
It meant that Australia crashed to 113 all out in their second innings, which India chased down with six wickets in hand to win the Test within three days. Chappell came down heavily on the Australian batters for sweeping their way to a debacle in New Delhi.
The next mistake was the wholesale, indiscriminate and ridiculous use of the sweep shot. The sweep is a high-risk shot for all but those who play it naturally. Adding it to your repertoire in spinning conditions can be sensible, but not if it is the only option. There are other shots that are less risky and likely to be more profitable but, because the sweep for most batsmen has to be pre-meditated, the other options invariably fall by the wayside.


Intraday stocks under 50 NSE India Twitter of India

10% popularity Vote Up Vote Down


Login to follow story

More posts by @IndiaNEWS

0 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

Back to top | Use Dark Theme