In their first formal meeting since taking over as national selectors on
October 1, Sandeep Patil and his colleagues decided not to pick a
spinner in the 14-member squad to be led by Suresh Raina. The decision
to not play a spinner is perhaps because the Indian team management does
not want to give England exposure to what is likely to be their biggest
challenge during the Test series.
While Raina, Yuvraj, Ajinkya Rahane and Manoj Tiwary were included among
nine specialist batsmen, Rohit was left out, an indication the Mumbai
batsman could have to revive his chances by scoring big in the Ranji
Trophy.
Rajasthan batsmen Robin Bist and Ashok Menaria were rewarded for their
consistent performances. Bist, the highest run-getter in the previous
Ranji Trophy season, had also toured West Indies in June as part of the A
squad. Menaria was selected after an impressive outing during the A
tour to New Zealand in September.
Tiwary, whose technique wasn't considered to be up to Test standards by
the previous selection panel, Delhi opener Shikhar Dhawan and the Tamil
Nadu top-order pair of M Vijay and Abhinav Mukund completed the batting
line-up. The bowling attack comprised seamers Irfan Pathan, Ashok Dinda,
R Vinay Kumar and Parvinder Awana, who had broken down while bowling
his first spell on the A tour of the Caribbean.
Yuvraj's selection was on expected lines after his 208 for North Zone
against Central Zone. He had returned to competitive action after a
nine-month break because of a rare germ-cell cancer during India's
Twenty20 international against New Zealand and the World Twenty20 that
followed in September and October.
And when he was named in the North Zone side for the Duleep Trophy
semi-final, Yuvraj had admitted he wasn't sure how his body would cope
with four-day cricket. He made most of the opportunity, though, and his
208 - against an attack that included Praveen Kumar, Bhuvneshvar Kumar
and Murali Kartik - was only a run less than his highest in first-class
score.
Should Yuvraj perform against Alastair Cook's team in the three-day
fixture at the Cricket Club of India's Brabourne Stadium next week, he
is likely to be a contender for the No. 6 slot in India's Test batting
order.
After VVS Laxman's retirement ahead of the two-Test series against New
Zealand in August, Suresh Raina was the preferred No. 6, ahead of Rohit,
Rahane and Tiwary. However, Yuvraj will now have an opportunity to
stake his claim


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