HomeSportsCricketIndian batters' struggle against quality spin- Sehwag's bold statement as Gambhir faces this challenge as head coach

Indian batters' struggle against quality spin- Sehwag's bold statement as Gambhir faces this challenge as head coach

Sehwag attributes India's spin troubles to two main factors: a lack of quality spinners and insufficient exposure to spin in domestic cricket.

September 06, 2024 / 11:07 IST
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Gautam Gambhir's first assignment as head coach began on a bittersweet note, with India whitewashing Sri Lanka 3-0 in the T20Is but suffering a 0-2 defeat in the ODIs. The ODI series started with a tie – with no Super Over – followed by Sri Lanka winning the second and third ODIs by convincing margins. The victory was made even sweeter by the fact that Sri Lanka was missing some of their key players – Matheesha Pathirana, Wanindu Hasaranga, and Dilshan Madushanka – due to injuries.

The ODI series defeat highlighted a long-standing issue for India: their batters' struggle against quality spin. In the three ODIs, India lost 27 of their 30 wickets to spinners, with Jeffrey Vandersay's 6/33 causing significant damage in the second game, and Dunith Wellalage's five-wicket haul cleaning up in the decider. Wellalage had also caused problems for the same team a year ago at the Asia Cup 2023 in Colombo, but India managed to scrape through to victory.

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Gone are the days when the Indian batting line-up would dominate spin regardless of the conditions. Since the 2008 tour of Sri Lanka, when 'mystery' spinner Ajantha Mendis was unleashed, India's famed batting line-up of the 2000s – featuring Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, VVS Laxman, and Sourav Ganguly – rarely faltered. Today, however, it has become common for Indian batsmen to struggle against spin. Whether faced with a part-time spinner or a specialist, the last decade has seen Indian batting repeatedly tested by spin, and addressing this issue will be one of Gambhir's foremost challenges.

Regarding the decline in India's ability to play spin, Virender Sehwag, who made a career out of dominating spinners, offered an insightful perspective. The only batter to score two triple-centuries in Tests, Sehwag attributes India's spin troubles to two main factors: a lack of quality spinners and insufficient exposure to spin in domestic cricket.