Christchurch: Their pride bruised and techniques exposed in adverse conditions, India’s famed batting line-up will face their hour of reckoning against a New Zealand pace attack, threatening to be relentless with their short ball tactics in the second Test starting here Saturday.
The ignominy of a three-day defeat in a World Test Championship encounter has certainly jolted a batting line-up that prides themselves in performing in tough conditions. And none other than coach Ravi Shastri is first to agree.
“A shake up like this is good as it opens your mindset. When you are on the road all the time and have not tasted defeat, it can close your mindset,” Shastri was forthright in his admission that complacency had crept in somewhere.
Come Saturday, the Virat Kohlis, Cheteshwar Pujaras and Ajinkya Rahanes will face an even tougher test on a green top at the Hagley Oval where the Black Caps have won all but one Test. The pitch here is very, very green indeed… an ominous warning of things to come.
With the peerless practitioner of the short-ball tactic Neil Wagner joining Tim Southee, Trent Boult and Kyle Jamieson in aiming for the rib cage from round the wicket, there will be more probing questions on offer during the next five days.
One good news for India is that Prithvi Shaw was back in the nets with an extensive session under watchful eyes of the coach and some valuable tips from the skipper. “Prithvi is ready to go,” the coach cleared the air on the opener’s fitness.
What the Indian team would want is one among Aninkya Rahane, Hanuma Vihari and Cheteshwar Pujara to show positive intent as their identical defensive game is bound to put too much pressure on skipper Kohli. The skipper has said that it is no use to be ultra-cautious and that the batsmen need to play positively and not just defend.
The visitors, in all likelihood, will have one change in the playing XI from the last Test with Ravichandran Ashwin likely to lose his spot to Ravindra Jadeja.
While Shastri said that a call will be taken tomorrow on Jadeja and Ashwin, he gave enough hints that Saurashtra all-rounder has his nose ahead.
“You look at the conditions and also check how much a spinner would bowl. Ashwin is a world class bowler but I guess he would be disappointed with his batting,” Shastri’s answer was a giveaway.
For New Zealand, it could be an all-pace attack considering that Ajaz Patel, the specialist left arm spinner, had precious little to do at the Basin Reserve.
With Wagner getting his place back, the team management would find it difficult to bench Jamieson who won man of the match award on Test debut.
“It’s a good kind of worry to have for Kane,” senior pacer Trent Boult said when asked who among Jamieson and Patel would feature in the playing XI.
The green pitch will be hard, even bouncy with good carry, according to the curator and that’s exactly what Boult wants. “From a bowling perspective, it’s exciting (to see the pitch). I hope it stays that way. With cloud cover and a surface like this, seam and swing will be on offer,” the left-arm pacer said.
For the Indian team, it’s not only about batting as Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Shami’s underwhelming show at the Basin has also been a cause of concern. Their length was awry and failure to get the tail-enders quickly stuck out like a sore thumb.
Bumrah, in particular, has had an indifferent tour and this is the first time in his four year international career where he is experiencing a bad patch. But Shastri is very confident that a ‘five for or six-for’ is just round the corner.
Agencies