The time for fudging is over. In dealing India the kind of defeat that
no one, including the most optimistic England fans, would have seen
coming, England have bestowed on India a favour: all possible escape
clauses have been removed. Indian cricket has no choice now but to look
deep within and confront the magnitude of this failure.
Defeat, it is said with good reason, is a far better teacher than
victory. It is impossible to say if the outcome of this series would
have been any different if India had absorbed the lessons from their
serial disasters overseas last season; but perhaps they might have
approached the series with a keener sense of reality.
But there is a thin line between insouciance and being blasé. Somewhere
in the torrent of defeats, and in the scramble to make sense of them,
this line has been obscured, and reason and perspective have been lost.
It's impossible to know what Dhoni really thinks of the defeats that
have piled up under his watch in recent times, but if you went by his
public posture, you'd think he believes them to have been outside his
control.
So the 8-0 wasn't because India lacked energy and fitness, or skills
were waning with advancing age, or the players didn't give themselves
the best chance to prepare, or the fast bowlers had regressed and the
spinners couldn't spin the ball anymore. It was because their opponents
laid out pitches that discriminated against India.
After India had been bowled out inside 63 overs on the first day at Edgbaston,
the Indian camp, which contained a coach with intimate knowledge of
English conditions, let it be known that rarely had there been a pitch
that afforded so much seam movement. At the end of the first day,
England had careened to 84 without loss, and they ended that innings at
710 for 7. In their second go, India slumped to 89 for 6 before Dhoni
and Praveen Kumar took them past 200. A similar vein ran through the
tour of Australia: the pitches had been spiced up, they had more pace
and carry, and even the Sydney Cricket Ground had no spin.
And when the time came for India to return empty-handed from the World
Twenty20, Dhoni reflected on the cruelty of the format. What, in the
final analysis, had cost India a place in the semi-finals was a heavy
defeat to Australia,
which Dhoni, staggeringly, blamed on the wet ball. Batting first, India
scored only 140, and Australia knocked off the runs in 15 overs, losing
just one wicket, when they were on the doorstep of victory. Yes, it did
rain at the break, but India still opened the bowling with a spinner,
and Irfan Pathan, who had opened the batting ahead of six specialist
batsmen (and consumed 30 balls in scoring 31), came on fourth change
with the ball.
The external pressures make captaining India the toughest job in world
cricket, and perhaps owning up to mistakes and shortcomings is much
harder in an environment inflamed with passion, and one in which people
are prone to exaggeration. But a feeling has grown that so cloistered
has this Indian team become that it has started believing its own
excuses. Through its miserable run outside its own shores, a sense of
indignation had been building up within the team: let them come to our
backyard, we'll show them.
Series wins against West Indies and New Zealand at home kept this belief
alive, but even in these contests, India failed to see the signs. West
Indies stretched them in Delhi, and might have beaten them in Mumbai.
Twice India conceded big first-innings leads, and their spinners looked
out of depth for large stretches. Despite the 2-0 scoreline, even New
Zealand ran India close: in the second Test, they were a wicket away from causing panic on the final day.
England have left India with no place to hide. The last time before this that India lost a series at home,
it was to one of the greatest teams of all time. Back then, India
competed better. They got themselves into a position to win the Test in Chennai before the rain came, and in Nagpur, Australia were gifted a pitch that played to their strengths.
England are a good team but not yet a great one. They are a resilient,
spirited and committed group with some skilful bowlers, a couple of
resolute top-order players, and one great batsman. They were hopeless
against spin in three out of their last four Tests in the subcontinent
before this series, and were outplayed at home by South Africa. But they
ended up beating India, thoroughly and decisively, at their own game.
Their spinners outbowled the Indian ones by a ridiculous margin, their
fast bowlers produced better reverse swing, their batsmen showed greater
application and flair, and they had the superior wicketkeeper-batsman.
After losing by ten wickets in Mumbai
on a pitch made to order to doom England, India were driven to
despondency over how to find a way back into the series. In reality, it
was their starkest moment of truth.
Externally, they had everything under control. England had been denied
practice against spin in the lead-up to the series; at Mumbai, India's
captain had demanded, and been provided with, the pitch he wanted; they
had picked three spinners; and even the coin had rolled their way. Yet
they had been outspun and outbatted. Kolkata was an inevitability; the force had already been drained out of Indian cricket.
The decline of the Indian Test team has perhaps been unstoppable, but
the process has been exacerbated by denial. Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman
were never going to be easily replaced, and the time has come for India
to look beyond Sachin Tendulkar too, but the frightening thing is that
they haven't produced a world-class spinner since Harbhajan Singh.
Every crisis can be an opportunity. Indian cricket can start by
recognising the current one as such. Dhoni, as has become customary with
him, sought to scale down the magnitude of this defeat by terming the
2007 World Cup a bigger disaster. Really? One bad day against the worst run in Test cricket spanning more than 12 months over three continents?
In the absence of a better alternative, Dhoni could still be the man to
lead India in the near future, but India can't start rising until they
accept how low they have sunk.
Indian cricket has the financial might to bend the rest of the world
game to its will. But the real wealth lies in the quality of cricket its
players produce on the field. In business terms, the Indian national
team is the biggest asset of Indian cricket, and the cricket it plays is
its most valuable product. With its wealth, passion and pool of
players, there can be no excuses for India not producing a world-class
team in every form of cricket.
For Indian cricket to renew itself, this defeat must hurt. It should
rankle. And the way forward can only be forged with honesty, foresight,
the humility to accept inadequacies, and the courage to address them.
The team to play the next Test for India needs to be picked not merely
with the next series in mind but the next season. The Tendulkar question
will hang heavy, but it will be, as has been suggested widely, unfair
to leave the answer to him. Indian cricket owes him gratitude, but not
the burden of a perpetual debt.
India's fall has been swift and dramatic. But the regeneration could be
slow and painful. It would require commitment, perseverance and
patience. Even to the most gifted, success has never come easy.
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