India look to wrap up series on high note
Assessing Sai Sudharsan’s temperament and Nitish Kumar Reddy’s utility in home conditions would be topmost on India’s checklist when the high-on-confidence hosts take on a floundering West Indies team in the second and final Test starting on Friday.
ย
India’s fine combination of individually gifted cricketers, each capable of walking into any top side internationally, will be pitted against a West Indies outfit that looks a pale shadow of its glorious past and is struggling to stay relevant in the traditional format.
ย
It’s a team that now comprises largely reluctant players who might not even find takers in the ever-expanding global T20 freelance circuit. An innings defeat without a semblance of fight in Ahmedabad was a testimony to the current state of flux in Caribbean cricket.
ย
For India, another dominating performance isn’t just about wrapping up the series, but also about firming their grip on the World Test Championship points table and carrying a surge of confidence into the far sterner challenge that awaits against South Africa at home later this year.
ย
The surface at the Feroz Shah Kotla promises another quick finish. Assistant coach Ryan ten Doeschate noted a “dry patch” that he felt could be helpful for seamers. That alone ensures that Nitish, a promising young all-rounder, will retain his spot as India go in with an unchanged XI. For Nitish, bowling remains his primary strength in this format. With India’s batting line-up as deep and secure as any in world cricket, his evolution as a seam-bowling all-rounder is what the team management is keen to nurture in the long run.
ย
The selectors and coaches aren’t too concerned yet about Sai Sudharsan, but six failures in his last seven completed innings do present a reality check for a player still finding his rhythm in the demanding red-ball arena.
ย
Yashasvi Jaiswal got a start, KL Rahul is in the form of his life, having scored three hundreds in his last six Tests and with skipper Shubman Gill also helping himself with a half century, Sudharsan’s poor scores stuck out like a sore thumb as Dhruv Jurel and Ravindra Jadeja also scored centuries. Although he has the backing of Gill, Sudharsan would like to put a premium on his wicket, knowing that there are others in queue.
ย
While India’s dressing room buzzes with purpose, the West Indies appear adrift, trapped in a cycle of mediocrity that even their own legends find hard to explain. For now, everything about this contest suggests the inevitable: another Indian victory, swift and ruthless, and quite possibly another three-day finish.
ย
Also read: Batting-friendly pitch likely for second Test against WI