Fast bowler Umesh Yadav, who was ruled out
of India's second Test against England due to a lower back injury, will
miss at least the third Test of the series too, which starts in Kolkata
on December 5.
Yadav, the most effective of India's pace bowlers in the series-opener in Ahmedabad,
will not recover in time despite there being a prolonged break ahead of
the Test. "The injury is more serious than it was thought to be, so the
team will have to make do without him for at least another Test," an
insider told ESPNcricinfo.
As a result, the national selection panel will have another reason to
ponder over the bowling attack when they sit down, on Tuesday, to
finalise the India squad for the remaining two Tests and the two
Twenty20 internationals that follow before England fly home for
Christmas.
After Yadav was ruled out of the Wankhede Test,
on the eve of the game, the team management chose to ignore Ishant
Sharma and Ashok Dinda, who was called in as late replacement for him,
and played all the three spinners in the XI instead. However, the trio
of Pragyan Ojha, R Ashwin and Harbhajan Singh was outdone by England's Graeme Swann and Monty Panesar, meaning changes are on the cards.
Sandeep Patil, India's chief selector, and his colleagues will have to
decide whether one of Piyush Chawla or Amit Mishra, the legbreak bowlers
who have proven their fitness in the Ranji Trophy, is a better choice
than Harbhajan as the third spinner. Returning to Test cricket after a
14-month break, Harbhajan returned match figures of 23-1-84-2, with
lower-order batsmen Stuart Broad and James Anderson his only victims.
Harbhajan, though, is one game shy of becoming the tenth India cricketer
to have made 100 Test appearances.
While Dinda is set to stay in the squad, it remains to be seen if the
selectors decide to increase the squad strength to 16, to allow Yadav to
continue his rehabilitation within the national set-up.
There are unlikely to be any changes made to the batting line-up, despite the top order's failure at the Wankhede.
With India having failed to impress for the third consecutive time in
the World Twenty20, in Sri Lanka in September-October, it will be
interesting to see the new selection panel's T20 combination. These
selectors are set to pick a squad for the shortest format for the first
time, and it might not be a surprise if there is a major shake-up to
that unit, which failed to make it past the Super Eights stage at the
World T20.
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