How about Sehwag in the middle order?
He has always talked about how he would like to bat lower down. Perhaps he should be granted that wish now
The Indian selectors have done the right thing by including
some senior stalwarts of Indian cricket in the India A team against
West Indies A. I believe that when you drop players of the calibre of Virender Sehwag, Gautam Gambhir and Zaheer Khan for poor form, you should also be keen to have them back when their form returns.
Dropping established senior players can have two effects. One: the
player takes being dropped so much to heart that he never recovers from
the jolt, and comes back a shadow of himself. Two: the player comes back
with the vigour and intent of old, and the team ends up getting a few
good seasons out of him.
Sehwag is an interesting case here. We have heard stories about Zaheer
and Yuvraj Singh training hard to get back to peak fitness. Gambhir has
gone to England, knowing that good performances there tend to make news
in the Indian media, thus putting pressure on the selectors to pick him.
But what is Sehwag doing? We haven't heard much about his activities.
He seems to have chosen to keep a low profile.
This can be easily misinterpreted as him having no desire to return to
Indian cricket, unlike his three colleagues, but we must be careful to
not draw such conclusions, just as much as we ought not to be too
carried away by Zaheer's and Yuvraj's "exotic" training stints
in France. In both cases the judgement should be made on pure
performance and fitness, based on the players' showings against West
Indies A.
Sehwag has always done things differently. He has batted differently and
so also prepared for matches differently. Maybe these unique methods
happened to suit his general approach to life, but you cannot grudge a
player an approach that has brought him success over 103 Tests in 12
years. He has had a hugely successful run and it is natural for him to
keep trusting the process that brought him such incredible results.
I heard a story once of how VVS Laxman
was having a knock on the morning of the last day of a Test series,
though he had no role to play in the rest of the match. So also Sehwag,
who asked VVS, "What's the point of this knock when your next match is
two months later?" That's how Sehwag thinks. But while you can easily be
fooled by his casual demeanour, for him to have played more than 100
Tests, there has to be a burning desire inside along with some
god-gifted talent.
Obviously Sehwag fans are excited that he is back in the reckoning and
are hoping that he clicks in the two India A games and comes back into
the national team. Well, unfortunately for them, even if he gets two
hundreds in those two games, the fact is that there is no place for
Sehwag as an opener in this Indian team for a while. Murali Vijay and
Shikhar Dhawan have done so well as Test openers lately that the
selectors will be obliged to give them a long run even if they fail. For
Sehwag, who is 34, time is running out. At that age, one year in
cricket is like a decade in another profession.
Sehwag deserves another break at Test level only if he has done something about his fitness. He must look a lot more youthful in the field than he did against England | |||
So that brings us to what Sehwag has been saying for many years, even
when he was getting runs by the ton as an opener: "I would like to bat
in the middle order." It's a desire that he seems to have held forever
as a Test batsman. I have held the view that for a natural middle-order
batsman, he served India amazingly well as an opener when they
desperately needed one, so how about granting him that wish before his
career finishes?
If for no other reason, at least because there is a chance of an opening
for him in the middle order. With India strongly committing towards
youth, an experienced batsman with the cheek needed for that position,
where you often have to bat with tailenders towards the end of an
innings, may be able to add some value to the team. Sehwag could play
the kind of innings VVS did for India in Tests.
Of course there is a possibility that he may find batting down the order after 170 innings at the top
not so easy after all, but you cannot deny that this is a tempting
idea, one you would like to see tried before he is finally let go.
Having said all this, here is what's really important. When Sehwag
eventually arrives on the public stage to play in those India A matches,
he must look like a player a selector would want to give that
opportunity to. It was embarrassing, to say the least, to see in last
year's home series against England, balls edged by batsmen hit various
parts of Sehwag's body before he could react at slip. That was a serious
fitness issue and it worried me more than his passage of low scores.
Sehwag deserves another break at Test level only if he has done
something about his fitness. He must look a lot more youthful in the
field than he did the last time.
The new Indian team under MS Dhoni is big on fitness. We have seen the
difference that has made to India's performance lately. The days where
only skill mattered in Indian cricket seem to have gone.
If Sehwag wants another crack, he must know times have changed and there can be room only for a fit Sehwag.
Viru Sehwag came into international cricket as a No 6 batsman who was
primarily a bowler as his natural flight drift in his off spinners would
bear out. In fact his debut 100 came against the likes of Shaun
Pollock,Hayward,Ntini and Kallis at Blomfontin.He was an instant hit as
an opener though scoring a breathtaking 100 in Sri Lanka.Because of that
and his many exploits at the top against the very best bowling, he
remained there.The fact that he is a fearless Jat from Najafgarh added
to his unmistakable aura as a great player.In spite of his primarily
role now as a batsman he carried on being a very useful bowler as well. I
feel he and Jaysuriya were similar in their cricketing abilities.
Personally I feel he has another couple of years in the game at the
highest level. Since he is a natural, I am willing to wager that the old
Haryanvi has a few 100s still left in him. He is therefore worth a try
at no 4 in Tests.The thing is when he fires he takes out whole bowling
lineups. His USP.
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