HomeNewsCricketIndian team’s loss to South Africa is just part of the natural ebb and flow of sports

Indian team’s loss to South Africa is just part of the natural ebb and flow of sports

Indian cricket has had a good run over the last 10 years. The current slump is just the natural ebb of that tide.

January 30, 2022 / 11:13 IST
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No need to read too much into India's recent losses or to look for scapegoats, the best teams in the world have suffered under such circumstances. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)
No need to read too much into India's recent losses or to look for scapegoats, the best teams in the world have suffered under such circumstances. (Illustration by Suneesh K.)

Much hand-wringing has ensued after the Indian cricket team’s disastrous tour of South Africa where it lost the three-test series as well as all the One-day games after that. The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), a favorite whipping boy of the media, has copped most of the blame and it does have much to explain, the brouhaha over the captaincy being the most obvious. Apologists for the team have also suggested that the quarantining necessitated by the Omicron outbreak impacted the visitors more than it did the home team.

None of these factors allows for the natural ebb and flow of sports teams. This is an Indian team in decline and it was caught off-guard by the Proteas who have found fresh energy after being in the doldrums for the last few years. The fact that not a single Indian made it to ICC’s Team of the Year for ODIs and T20s, tells its own story.

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It is evident that the Indians lost because their batting was brittle and unequal to the task. The failure of the middle order packed with veterans like Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli and Ajinkya Rahane, left the makeshift opening pair of K.L. Rahul and Mayank Agarwal, along with the heroic Rishabh Pant, too much to do. But this wasn’t entirely a surprise. The numbers prove quite starkly that the three stars are long past their prime.

Also read: Who will follow Virat Kohli as captain? Some obvious choices, but no striking ones