Sunday, January 29, 2006

THIRD-DEGREE TORTURE FOR BOWLERS

BY BISWADEEP GHOSH

Is this cricket? One was forced to ask this question after watching the first two Tests in the highly awaited Indo-Pak series. Most batsmen had a ball, almost everyone seemed capable of scoring centuries, while the bowlers toiled endlessly. And it seemed, rather needlessly. So 'batsman-friendly' were the pitches that, believe me, even Sourav Ganguly could have hammered a hundred if he was given an opportunity. After all, he is known to make the most of favourable situations, isn't he? Tons against Namibia, Holland -- they are too recent to be forgotten.

The idea is not to make a scapegoat out of Ganguly. That must be left to Greg Chappell and company, who are doing a spectacular job anyway. What needs to be emphasised is that the brains behind the cricketing pitches have no business to reduce quality bowlers to jokers. In the first innings of the first Test, Pakistan posted a formidable total of 679 for seven declared. Younis Khan, Mohammed Yousuf, Shahid Afridi and Kamran Akmal scored centuries, while the Indian bowlers suffered, just suffered. The situation was loaded in Pakistan's favour, while most went on and on about how badly our players bowled.

Tongues stopped wagging when the Indians went in to bat. Virender Sehwag just went after the Pakistan bowlers, and smashed them to every possible corner of the park. In the role of an opener, Rahul Dravid played the perfect foil as the Indians put on 410 runs before losing Sehwag. They were closing in on the world record for the opening stand held by Vinoo Mankad and Pankaj Roy, while the Pakistani attack looked much worse than India's all through. The much-hyped aggression of Shoaib Akhtar, which was being spoken about as the difference between the two teams, did not even threaten our batsmen mildly. The fault was not Shoaib's though. What could he have done when the pitch did nothing to assist him?

The second match followed the pattern of the first. Apart from an inspiring spell by Zaheer Khan, who picked up a few quick wickets in the Pakistan second innings, never for a moment did the match seem like serious cricket. The batsmen plundered each other's attacks, and improved their averages. The bowlers got murdered. In the Pakistan first innings score of 588, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Afridi scored centuries while Younis Khan missed out on one. When the Indians responded with 603, Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Dravid scored centuries. VVS Laxman and Irfan Pathan made 90 each.

Because Inzamam and Shoaib Malik did not bat, the Pakistan second innings folded up very quickly. Seriously. Despite centuries from Younis Khan and Mohammad Yusuf, the team could manage merely 490, the worst of the series. The match ended without making any vague promise of a result. The batsmen went back home happy. The bowlers left thinking why life was giving them such a bad deal. Nobody can blame them.

Why this Indo-Pak series is a horror story is since fans from both the countries expect to see serious duels on the cricketing ground. They wish to experience nail-biting moments such as those in which the pacer makes a batsman evade the cherry with short-pitched deliveries, or when the spinner deceives the batsman into playing a false shot with sublime guile. Each fan wants to see his country win, and very badly at that. One victory for India, and the entire country becomes ecstatic. One triumph for Pakistan, and everyone starts mourning.

Indo-Pak outings being emotionally charged affairs, it was highly essential that the pitches were made in such a way that they yielded results. They had to help the bowlers from time to time so that they had some hope in their hearts when they ran up to bowl. Both the teams have fine bowlers. But they needed opportunities to display their skills, which they simply did not get. What they got instead was third-degree torture on the cricketing ground.

The two Indo-Pak tests will be remembered for a long time because fans lost track of centuries. They will be even better remembered for being cruel run feasts that ended up raising the bowling averages of players from both the countries. Very sad indeed, but then a select few chose to spoil the party of millions. Guess they know why. +

(The copyright of this article rests with The Maharashtra Herald)

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