Saturday, December 8, 2007

Yuvraj, Ganguly slam majestic tons on first day




Bangalore: A record fifth wicket partnership of 300 runs between Sourav Ganguly and Yuvraj Singh helped India finish on an impressive 365-5 on the opening day of the third and final Test against Pakistan at the Chinnaswamy Stadium here on Saturday.

Coming in when the Indian innings was in a shambles at 61-4, the two southpaws mixed caution with aggression during their 393-ball association which lasted 252 minutes, the duo took the team to a stable position.

Ganguly and Yuvraj surpassed the previous best stand for the fifth wicket against Pakistan, of 200 between Ravi Shastri and Sandeep Patil at Faisalabad in 1984-85.

Yuvraj, the more dominating of the two, scored his highest Test score of 169 before he was caught by Faisal Iqbal off Mohammad Sami. The Punjab batsman slammed 28 boundaries and a six off 203 balls.

The master (Ganguly) let his pupil (Yuvraj) take centre-stage as the youngster was in a murderous mood and dominated the proceedings with some immaculate shots to all corners of the park.

Yuvraj completed his third Test century when he cover drove Yasir Arafat for his 18th boundary after facing 137 balls. Earlier in the over he had stylishly square cut the bowler to the third man fence.

He took the fight to the enemy’s camp with a series of blistering drives and cuts. He was particularly severe on Mohammad Sami, who was gave him too much width.

Ganguly, who completed his second consecutive hundred with a cover-driven four off Yasir Hameed, was going strong on 125 with 24 hits to the fence, while Dinesh Karthik (three) was the other not out batsman at stumps as India notched up the highest first day score at Bangalore.

Even as Yuvraj dominated proceedings, Ganguly grew in confidence and matched Yuvraj in elegance and poise. Ganguly, who took time to build his innings, then took over from Yuvraj and attacked the Pakistan bowling quite effectively.

Like Yuvraj, Ganguly’s century too was studded with 18 hits to the fence.

Earlier, Arafat struck thrice to leave India gasping in the first session. Replacing Shoaib Akhtar as one change bowler, Arafat, scalped the prize wickets of former Indian captain Rahul Dravid (19), Wasim Jaffer (17) and Laxman (five) in his inspiring first spell in Test cricket.

Arafat had Dravid caught in the slips, trapped last match’s double-centurion Jaffer lbw and then bowled Laxman with a delivery that kept low.

In fact, the hosts had their share of luck when Jaffer was dropped in the gully by Sami off Shoaib Akhtar when on two with the Indian score reading six for no loss.

Sami however, made amends soon after when he had Gautam Gambhir caught by wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal for five to reduce India to eight for one. This was his first wicket of the series as he had gone wicket-less in the earlier matches at Delhi and Kolkata.

Earlier, Indian skipper Anil Kumble elected to bat first.

Injury-hit India are without the services of Sachin Tendulkar (knee injury), Mahendra Singh Dhoni (ankle injury and tear in the webbing of his left hand) and the two new ball bowlers – Zaheer Khan and Munaf Patel – who played in the drawn second Test match at Kolkata.

After a long wait Yuvraj and Delhi opener Gambhir have been drafted in place of Tendulkar and Dhoni while Irfan Pathan and Ishant Sharma have come in place of Zaheer Khan and Munaf Patel respectively.

The visitors made one change bringing in all-rounder Yasir Arafat for left arm pace man Sohail Tanvir. Arafat has played in seven ODIs earlier to this Test match.

This will also be the 100th international match for former Sri Lankan batsman Ranjan Madugalle as the Match Referee of the International Cricket Council (ICC). Mudugalle was honoured with a memento by the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) president Srikanta Dutta Vodiyar during lunch interval.

Rahul Dravid , A Poignant Outlook


Sure the likes of Dravid, Ganguly and Tendulkar need to be phased out, but the transition needs to be planned with care

Rahul Dravid must wonder if he didn't bring it upon himself. He did two things distinctly un-Indian. When he was captain, he didn't give himself a fixed position at the top of the order. As India's most consistent batsman he could have had the No. 3 position by right, but he chose to bat at five, sometimes even six - positions where consistent scores are least likely - because he wanted his stroke-makers to get more overs. He didn't see it as a sacrifice but a decision taken in the best interest of the team and with an eye towards the development of young players.

Two, he gave up the captaincy when he could have had it for another year at least. This was a decision he made more for his own sake. When he was re-appointed captain after the World Cup disaster, Dravid had laid out his expectations and given himself a time allowance. Despite the Test-series victory in England and the closeness of the one-day series, he perhaps didn't see Indian cricket moving in the direction he would have liked it to head in. There was little progress on the administrative front: the search for a coach had gone nowhere, the post of the administrative manager continued to be a dole, and there was no sign of a media manager being appointed. Dealing with what went on on the field was one thing, but Dravid had no stomach for what went on off it. It could be termed a weakness: captaining India requires a thick skin, a certain indifference to externals, which Dravid lacked and couldn't acquire.

However, these decisions merely confirmed what we have known about Dravid the cricketer and the man. They were born of earnestness, commitment to Indian cricket, and a clear idea about his priorities. Giving up the captaincy meant giving up certain privileges - and as it transpired, even his place in the side - but once his heart was not in it, he preferred not to hold on to it for the wrong reasons. That's the essence of the man. Sanjay Manjrekar described him as the most selfless Indian cricketer of the last decade with good reason.

Of all cricketers Dravid could be expected to go before being pushed. It's the toughest decision for a sportsperson, but it was assumed that Dravid, a player with a keen sense of the history of the game, and an awareness of life outside the bubble of cricket, would know when the time came. And it was also thought that he of all his contemporaries would last longest, for his game was least touched by time.

Yes, his Test form has dipped. It's rare for him to go two series without making a serious contribution. Between 2000 and 2006, he had a pivotal role in every major Indian Test win, but since his two masterpieces on a difficult pitch in Jamaica last year, he hasn't been the formidable batsman the world has known him to be. Perhaps the captaincy was beginning to weigh on him.

Dravid would be the first to agree that the selection process needs to be insulated from sentiments and the cult of individual. Instead it should be based on cold logic and should have an eye on the future. As captain he supported some of the tough decisions the previous selection committee took, and it included dropping Sourav Ganguly, his predecessor and an iconic figure in Indian cricket. Dravid, more than anyone else, understands and appreciates the significance of building for the future. But the question that must be asked is: what is the basis for not picking Dravid?

All we have got so far is a series of incoherent, and sometimes contradictory, statements from Dilip Vengsarkar, the chairman of selectors. In fact, it has been a feature of his reign.

Is this the beginning of a rotation policy? No, there isn't a need to rotate players; we must pick the best team every time. Is this the end of the road for Dravid, then? No, he is a great player and he will surely make a comeback. Is this, then, a selection purely on current form? Yes, form and fitness are important in this form of the game. Dravid must prove both playing for his state. So, there we have it now. Dravid needs to prove both his fitness and form in a four-day Ranji Trophy match if he is to force his way back into the one-day team.

With the previous selection committee, we knew what the vision was - whether right or wrong was moot. Vengsarkar began his tenure by reversing the push towards youth - "Where is the bench strength?" was an early famous quote - but was last heard gushing about youth in the wake of India's Twenty20 success. Would the selectors have chosen a young team for the World Twenty20 if Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly hadn't withdrawn by themselves? The more we see of it, this looks like a committee that is happy to change its course with the tide.

Some of its decisions have been truly baffling, and none more than those to do with Virender Sehwag, who paid for a prolonged bad run in one-day cricket with his place in the team in Tests, a form in which his record has been outstanding. In fact, he wasn't even dropped from the one-day squad to start with, and then made his comeback via Twenty20 cricket.

The team for the first two one-dayers has five openers, none of them, apart from Tendulkar, capable of being a mid-innings builder. And it's been clear for a while that Tendulkar doesn't want to bat down the order. No successful one-day team in the history of cricket has been built around dashers: from Larry Gomes to Michael Bevan to Damien Martyn to Michael Hussey, every successful side has had an accomplished accumulator in the middle. If we look around today, Sri Lanka have Mahela Jayawardene; South Africa, Jacques Kallis; and Pakistan, Younis Khan and Mohammed Yousuf. And England are beginning to realise just how valuable Ian Bell is.

It's no one's case that India must plan their one-day future around Dravid. In fact, they must start looking beyond him and Tendulkar and Ganguly. But the transition must be planned with thought and care. When Dravid plays well, he lends balance to the team. When he goes, he must be replaced with someone who is suited to playing his role.

Selection is not about whims and convenience. And it is not always about the immediate. Strong decisions deserve support. But they have to be made with the right and clear intentions.