...
...
Next Story

Crumbling pitch sets Chennai Test on rocky course

Chennai seems a different deal altogether. Not often do you see two pitches on the same square sporting completely different top soil shades—the one used in the first Test was dusty red while the second one bore a darker look.

Updated on: Feb 14, 2021 10:45 AM IST
Advertisement

The first puff of dust came off the fifth ball of the day, a full Stuart Broad delivery to Rohit Sharma. In the ninth over, left-arm spinner Jack Leach’s drifter again kicked up some dust. So did the Moeen Ali delivery that dipped brilliantly to sneak through the gap between Virat Kohli’s bat and pad to clip the top of off-stump. All this happened before lunch. These are ominous signs, even by Indian standards. Indian pitches can’t be typecast because of the varying nature of base soil, but they generally aid batting till the third day before wear and tear affords purchase for spinners.

Indian captain Virat Kohli plays a shot during the 5th and final day of first cricket test match between India and England, at MA Chidambaram Stadium. (PTI)
Indian captain Virat Kohli plays a shot during the 5th and final day of first cricket test match between India and England, at MA Chidambaram Stadium. (PTI)

Chennai, however, seems a different deal altogether. Not often do you see two pitches on the same square sporting completely different top soil shades—the one used in the first Test was dusty red while the second one bore a darker look. The pitch report before toss spoke of a dry, completely different surface that may not have been rolled a lot for it to firm up. It was in keeping with earlier reports that said even though the base will have local red soil, and the top layer will be primarily black clay that breaks down faster.

Those puffs of dust are proof of rapid disintegration of the top soil. And it spun. A lot. If the pitch in the first Test spun more than 3 degrees on average, Day 1 of the second Test began with 4.4 degrees in the first session before going past 5 after tea. Leach, who generally bowls better in the second innings, looked threatening for the bulk of the 26 overs he bowled on Saturday.

The pitch for the first Test took two days to change from a slow strip to an unpredictable track for batting. This one will wear out quicker. It’s thus not a very ideal pitch for Test cricket.

“It is a difficult track where you don’t know whether to come forward or remain on the back-foot,” said Sunil Gavaskar while doing TV commentary. The only reason India finished the day with a smile was because they had won the toss and batted. Rahane made no bones about it. “We knew it was going to turn from Day 1, so obviously it was good to win the toss,” he said.

ADAPTING QUICKLY

Batting technique too needs a tweak on this pitch. Playing against the spin, for which Kohli paid a hefty price, is a strict no early in the innings. Rahane showed how coming down the pitch negates slower bowlers. Centurion Rohit Sharma, like Joe Root in the first Test, used the tried and tested sweep shot. He didn’t look entirely at ease executing it at times but Sharma got the results till he was dismissed, ironically, trying the sweep.

“I was sweeping from the rough because it’s a good option as you can’t be leg-before. It also cuts out the chance of the ball going up. It’s a percentage shot on that pitch,” Sharma said in the media interaction after play. He said 350 would be good enough on a pitch where something is “happening every ball”.

Given how the pitch behaved, it’s remarkable India are not far from that target. England too have batsmen who adapt well. And they have a template now, having watched Sharma and Rahane go about their business against the spinning ball. “As you saw with Rohit Sharma and Rahane, once you get a partnership going with that older ball it can get a little bit easier,” said Leach. “So we have to certainly believe we can do the same when we come to bat.”

It’s a tall ask though, especially on a pitch clearly earmarked to trouble batsmen more with every passing hour. Today’s 350 could feel like 500 tomorrow.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Somshuvra Laha

Somshuvra Laha is a sports journalist with over 11 years' experience writing on cricket, football and other sports. He has covered the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup, the 2016 ICC World Twenty20, cricket tours of South Africa, West Indies and Bangladesh and the 2010 Commonwealth Games for Hindustan Times.

Get the Cricket Live Score! including IPL Matches and track ICC rankings shifts, Cricket Schedule, and Players Stats along with detailed score profiles of Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill.
Get the Cricket Live Score! including IPL Matches and track ICC rankings shifts, Cricket Schedule, and Players Stats along with detailed score profiles of Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON