Sunday 29 January 2012

FUTURE OF INDIAN CRICKET



another whitewash in the hands of the struggling aussies.things dosent seem good for the indian cricket right now so what all could have gone wrong for the indians went horribly wrong so how long will it take for the indian team to recover from the debacle the fab four of the indian team RAHUL DRAVID , SACHIN TENDULKAR , VVS LAXMAN & VIRENDER SEWAGH all faltered with the man who troubled the aussies for a long time a person who became famous because of his memorable knocks against the famed australians struggled the most really rumours are on that he is really going to retire his performances in the tour down under is really horrible with ravichandran ashwin scoring more runs than laxman things does not seem so good for laxman
MY THOUGHT IS  THAT THE SENIORS SHOULD NOT RETIRE AND THEY SHOULD BE USED IN A PHASED MANNER


The batsmen kept failing but kept getting picked and kept batting in the same positions on the top of that. The bowlers lacked the control; Ishant Sharma carried his flaws and misfortune, which might or might not be inter-related, despite a strong and specialised coaching staff; the old men without the runs didn't write off the debts they incurred in the field; the openers were found out, but everybody kept talking of a time in the past when they used to win.
They used to win no doubt but never as comprehensively as they have lost over their last two series. It was a team skating on thin ice, albeit skating exceptionally well until earlier this year, but the ice has given away now. The rescue squad is of the view it will prepare better ice at home.
They can't pinpoint a time when the desperation, the mongrel, left this team. Was it when the seniors passed a certain age - and can cricketers age all of a sudden? Was it when surgeries were postponed so that IPL could be played and Tests missed? Was it when the previous 4-0 whitewash was not even part of the board's recap of the last year at its awards function? Did the World Cup win exhaust them and sate them at the same time? This is all conjecture, and possibly unfair, but the fans are asking themselves these questions.
VVS Laxman remained strangely passive at the crease, and only in Adelaide - a Test he shouldn't have played in the first place - did he move his guard to middle stump to counter the fifth-stump line. Rahul Dravid knew his back foot was not moving across, and he tried his darnedest in the nets to overcome it, but could not manage it. Sachin Tendulkar began the summer gloriously, and still looked the best equipped technically, but that is where it stopped.

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