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Why our batting was pathetic

India's surrender led one to wonder whether this was the same team that launched a thousand dreams, writes Pradeep Magazine.

Updated on: Oct 10, 2004, 02:57:00 IST
PTI | By , Bangalore
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“I know in Indian cricket even a day can be a lifetime.” Indian coach John Wright said that right after India had beaten Australia in the Adelaide Test last December. By the same logic, three months could mean the passing of an age.
Just three months separate India’s outstanding show in Pakistan and its series of miserable batting performances from the Asia Cup in July.

HT Image
HT Image

And after their abject surrender in the first Test in Bangalore you have to wonder whether this was the same team that launched a thousand dreams. Why did it all go wrong?

Here’s a list of five reasons

TOO MUCH REST: It left the players rusty and it is obvious that most of them took this “rest” a bit too seriously. In the highly demanding and competitive world of cricket, if you are not match-fit — physically and mentally — it is difficult to discover your touch of old.

This happened to most of the top order and once your batting form goes, the pressure mounts and pressure can do many things to many people. It can even destroy a man mentally. Ask a Virender Sehwag or a Yuvraj Singh and you will get an answer.

  • Pradeep Magazine
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Pradeep Magazine

    Before I come to the point, a bit of a preamble is required. Even at the best of times, the relationship between those who perform and those who write and pass judgments on them is tenuous. And at the worst of times, it is tense and edgy. Over the years, both have generally learnt to live with each other and not cross the line between being downright rude and extra respectful, writes Pradeep Magazine.Read More

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