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Indian
bowlers told to adapt fast in Australia
NEW DELHI—Indian bowling coach Venkatesh Prasad is confident his young
new ball bowlers can adapt quickly to bouncy Australian pitches after
toiling on flat tracks in the home test series win over Pakistan this
week.
The ex-India paceman said the tour starting next week would push the
players but the team were confident thanks to their recent wins and
bowling consistency in varied conditions. “It is going to be a very
challenging series down under,” Prasad told Reuters on Friday. “It will
be exciting competition and all the players will be pushed to the limit
in terms of technique, tactics, mentally and physically.”
India leave on Monday for Australia to play in a four-test series
starting on Dec. 26 followed by a one-day tri-series also featuring Sri
Lanka. India are on a high after a one-day and test double over Pakistan
but their pace attack is injury depleted. Skipper Anil Kumble and
Harbhajan Singh are the spinners. The pacy Shanthakumaran Sreesanth has
a shoulder injury and Munaf Patel has been dropped due to a lack of
sharpness. Among the five chosen, only left-armers Zaheer Khan and Irfan
Pathan have previously played in Australia while young left-arm
R.P.Singh missed the Pakistan tests through injury.
India are hoping they can at least repeat their performance on the last
tour in 2003-4 when they drew the test series 1-1. Ishant Sharma, 19, is
two tests old but took a five-wicket innings haul in the drawn final
test while Pankaj Singh, 22, is uncapped, although their height could
prove handy on bouncy pitches in Australia.
“Our bowling is a bit inexperienced,” Prasad said “We might have played
on flat tracks but I’m very confident we’ll be ready to adapt because
they have done it before. He added: “Both Ishant and Pankaj have got
fantastic talent and lot of potential. They only have to work hard on
fitness and be open to ideas.” Prasad was appointed in April and the
team have since won test series in Bangladesh and England. Indian
bowlers also shone in the Twenty20 World Cup win in South Africa in
September.
“We’ve been talking about adaptability, that is our mantra,” he said.
“We’ve shown a lot of adaptability in terms of pitch conditions, weather
and playing against different teams.”
However, he said the lack of a gap between series was preventing injury
recovery for fast bowlers with flat home pitches like those used against
Pakistan making their life tougher. “If we have to develop fast bowling
then we need to look at the pitches as well,” he said. “People ask ‘why
can’t we produce quick bowlers?’ How can we if the bowlers who want to
bowl quick are bowling on flat wickets.
“They tend to reduce their pace after a game or two and rely on swing,
movement,” he said In a recorded message, Sourav Ganguly - India’s most
successful captain - hailed Kumble’s leadership skills. “The first day
in Delhi [ahead of the first Test against Pakistan], the team meeting
summed up everything. Certain issues were addressed and from that point
I knew things were going to turn out well.” In a freewheeling chat,
Kumble picked Shane Warne over Muttiah Muralitharan as his favourite
spinner, termed his maiden Test century (at The Oval against England in
June this year) as one of his career highlights, and mentioned that
post-retirement, he preferred to take up coaching in Bangalore to
touring as part of the media.—Agencies |