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HomeNewsCricketICC Men’s Cricket World Cup: Will the absence of a right-arm leg-spinner bite the Indian team?

ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup: Will the absence of a right-arm leg-spinner bite the Indian team?

On Indian pitches that are known to assist spinners, it pays to have a right-arm wrist spinner to add variety and firepower. A look at the other nine participating teams will reveal at least one right-arm leg-break bowler in most of them.

September 30, 2023 / 15:56 IST
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Team India Illustration

A firm favourite for the ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup 2023, India believes it has all the bases covered going into the tournament even in the absence of a right-arm leg-spinner in its ranks.

The left-arm wrist spin is taken care of by Kuldeep Yadav, who has taken 33 wickets in 17 ODIs so far this year. Our man from Uttar Pradesh has bowled with a brilliant economy of 4.54 runs per over, and a tidy average of 15.52 runs per wicket, which is 10 runs less than his ODI average. His wicket-taking abilities and mature personality has made him a force to reckon with. Thus, he has got the nod ahead of other wrist spinners, including right-arm leg-spinner Yuzvendra Chahal.

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The closest the Indian team has to a right-arm leg-spinner is Shreyas Iyer, who has sent down 37 deliveries in ODIs without a wicket, with an economy of 6.32.

However, on Indian pitches that are known to assist spinners, it pays to have a right-arm wrist spinner to add variety, as the team has left-arm spinners in Ravindra Jadeja and Kuldeep Yadav and an experienced right-arm off-spinner in Ravichandran Ashwin.