Cricket, India: A history (2021)

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Contents

England home series

India’s success stories in T20Is

March 22, 2021: The Times of India

INDIA’S SUCCESS STORIES IN T20Is

SURYAKUMAR YADAV AS NO. 3

The Mumbai player looked natural in that slot and his ability to take on bowlers from the moment he walked in showed he is cut out for the big stage. He never allowed the tempo to drop, despite knowing full well that a failure might dent his hopes of being a long-term international player.

ISHAN KISHAN’S DAZZLING DEBUT

Another Mumbai Indians player who looked ready to play in any slot. Looked completely at ease during his explosive and match-winning 57 as an opener in the second game. He can also be an additional wicketkeeping option.

RETURN OF BHUVNESHWAR

The canny pacer has been bothered by injuries of late, but all that seemed a thing of the past. He was equally brilliant both in Powerplay and the slog overs and a Man of the Match effort in the deciding run-fest was an apt reward for his performances.

SHARDUL’S STRIKES

The CSK player has the ability to deliver what the captain wants. He has the happy knack of taking wickets at crucial stages — the dismissals of Ben Stokes and Eoin Morgan in the fourth match and Dawid Malan and Jonny Bairstow in the fifth in one over was an indication.

RETURN OF HARDIK THE BOWLER

The team management’s persistence to get Hardik back into bowling shape has paid dividends and he was able to complete his quota in most games. His intelligent change of pace kept the England batsmen on their toes and the three wickets were a bonus.

India’s rank in the world

March 6: India no.1 in tests

March 6, 2021: The Times of India

World Test championship points table, 2021
From: March 6, 2021: The Times of India
World Test championship, points table, as on March 8, 2021
From: March 6, 2021: The Times of India

India finish on top of ICC World Test Championship standings, courtesy 3-1 series win over England

DUBAI: India finished on top of the league phase of the ICC World Test Championship standings after crushing England by an innings and 25 runs in the fourth and final Test to pocket the series 3-1.

"That victory against England means India finish the league phase of the inaugural ICC World Test Championship with a fine view from the top of the table," the ICC tweeted.

A confused England batting line-up struggled against Axar Patel and Ravichandran Ashwin as India made it to the inaugural World Test Championship final.

India finished the league phase with 520 points, which includes 12 wins, four losses and one draw.

In the ICC World Test Championship final scheduled to be held at the iconic Lord's in June this year, India will face New Zealand.

New Zealand finished in the second spot with 420 points, including seven wins and four losses.

Australia finished third with 332 points ahead of England and Pakistan.

Sri Lanka: away series

ODIs

Colombo: India wins

Gaurav Gupta, July 19, 2021: The Times of India

Scoreboard: Sri Lanka vs India- away series, ODIs- Colombo
From: Gaurav Gupta, July 19, 2021: The Times of India

The way Ishan Kishan danced down the track to lift Dhananjaya de Silva down the ground for a six off the first ball he faced in ODIs, before cutting the spinner for a four off the next delivery, reflected the mindset of India’s IPL-fuelled gen-next, which believes in an ‘attack first’ policy. Powered by a captain’s knock by Shikhar Shawan, who slammed his 33rd halfcentury (86 not out, 95b, 6x4, 1x6), a 33-ball explosive half-century by ‘birthday boy’ ‘keeper-bat Kishan (59 off 42 balls) and a 23-ball 43 blitzkrieg by opener Prithvi Shaw, India scored a comprehensive seven-wicket win over Sri Lanka in the opening ODI at the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo, taking a 1-0 lead in the three-match series.

After Kishan and Shaw’s fireworks, Dhawan finished the job with Manish Pandey (26, 40b, 1x4, 1x6) and Suryakumar Yadav (31 not out, 20b, 5x4), another ODI debutant for India on the day, chipping in. Dhawan, who went past 6,000 ODI runs, deserves praise for the way he shed his normally aggressive approach to drop anchor at one end, enabling Kishan and Shaw to score at a fast pace.

Arriving at Shaw’s fall, Kishan, carted eight fours and two sixes, to smash the second-fastest fifty by a batsman in his first game in ODIs, keeping the momentum of India’s chase going ballistic. Using his feet and dancing down the track repeatedly, Kishan, was especially harsh on the spinners. If Shaw’s innings was all about timing and placement, Kishan’s knock was about brute power. Continuing his blazing form, Shaw cracked nine sweetly-timed fours to help India race away to 58 in five overs in pursuit of 262. It was almost as if he was enjoying a ‘net session,’ stroking the ball in a sublime manner. Perhaps rattled by a blow to his head off a bouncer by Dushmantha Chameera, Shaw seemed to have lost his concentration, as he threw his wicket away, spooning off-spinner Dhananjaya to long on.

Earlier, No 8 Chamika Karunaratne stroked an unbeaten 43 off 35 balls to help Sri Lanka finish at 262 for nine after the hosts chose to bat first. Too many Sri Lankan batsmen failed to capitalize on their starts— skipper Dasun Shanaka (39), Charith Asalanka (38), Avishka Fernando (33), Minod Bhanuka (27) and Bhanuka Rajapaksa (24) were all guilty of not carrying on after getting set. Prompted by the conditions, India played three spinners, and all of them did well. The match marked the return of the leg-spin duo of Yuzuvendra Chahal and Kuldeep — a pair fondly known as ‘Kulcha.’ Reunited in an ODI for the first time since the World Cup game against England at Edgbaston in 2019, they picked four wickets between them.

India wins second ODI, series

Gaurav Gupta, July 21, 2021: The Times of India

Scoreboard, Sri Lanka vs India, 2021- second ODI at the Premadasa Stadium, 2021
From: Gaurav Gupta, July 21, 2021: The Times of India

Before this match, Deepak Chahar was known as a swing bowler. After Tuesday night, he would be known as an allrounder, who can swing a match India’s way with his bat. In a knock which will certainly make a case for his inclusion in India’s T20 World Cup squad, Chahar, whose top ODI score was 12 before Tuesday, slammed 69 not out (82b, 7x4, 1x6) batting at No. 8 to help India chase down 276 in the final over and pull off an unlikely three-wicket win over Sri Lanka in the second ODI at the Premadasa Stadium. As expected, the visitors sealed the series, with the final game on Friday now of academic interest.

Having been reduced to 193 for seven in the 36th over, India looked to be losing the game, before Chahar added 84 for the eighth wicket in 87 balls with Bhuvneshwar Kumar (19 not out, 28b, 2x4) to get victory from a hopeless position. Towards the closing stages, Chahar was hit by cramps, but the Rajasthan bowler, who took two wickets with his knuckle balls earlier in the day, didn’t let that stop him from taking his team home, as he smashed Kasun Rajitha for a four to mid-wicket off the first ball of the last over. Realising that India just needed someone to stay at the wicket, Chahar batted with a wise head, not taking any unwarranted risk.

Before Chahar’s heroics, India’s charge was kept alive by Suryakumar Yadav (53, 44b, 6x4) - who scored his maiden half-century in his second ODI - and Manish Pandey (37, 31b, 3x4), who was unlucky to be run out at the non-striker’s end as the ball ricocheted off Sri Lankan skipper Dashun Shanaka’s hands. While Sri Lanka put in a spirited show, their misery continued. It was India’s ninth consecutive win in a bilateral series over the hosts.

Earlier, Charith Asalanka (65, 68b, 6x4) and Avishka Fernando (50, 71b, 4x4, 1x6) hit half-centuries, while for the second consecutive time, Chamika Karunaratne (44 not out, 33b, 5x4), batting at No 8, produced a brilliant cameo to help Sri Lanka score 275 for nine in 50 overs. Defending the total against an in-form Indian batting line-up, Lanka thrived on the fingers of leg-spinner Wanindu Hasaranga, who took the key wickets of Prithivi Shaw (13), skipper Shikhar Dhawan (29) and Krunal Pandya (35, 54b, 3x4). The hosts’ gamble of introducing Hasaranga in just the third over paid off handsomely as Shaw (13), looking dangerous again, was castled while going for an expansive drive. Hasaranga later trapped Dhawan (29) lbw before taking his third wicket in the 36th over, cleaning Krunal’s stumps with a beauty.

India’s hero in the last game, ‘keeper-bat Ishan Kishan was out for just one this time, inside-edging a ball onto his stumps while trying to smash Rajitha on the off-side. Allrounder Hardik Pandya spooned Shanaka to mid wicket for a two-ball duck. Shaw took three consecutive fours off Rajitha in the first two overs— two superb straight drives followed by a typical flick to midwicket, but lost his wicket while trying to be too adventurous.

On a rare day for Indian cricket when two Indian teams were playing in two different parts of the world on the same day for perhaps the first time ever, leg-spinner Yuzuvendra Chahal and seamer Bhvneshwar took three wickets each.

After openers Minod Bhanuka (36, 42b, 6x4) and Fernando (50, 71b, 4x4, 1x6) gave Sri Lanka an excellent 77-run start in 80 balls, Chahal struck twice in two balls in the 14th over.

Sri Lanka wins 3rd ODI

Gaurav Gupta, July 24, 2021: The Times of India

Scoreboard- Sri Lanka vs India, 3rd ODI- Colombo, Premadasa Stadium, 2021
From: Gaurav Gupta, July 24, 2021: The Times of India

Riding on half-centuries by Avishka Fernando (76, 98b, 4x4, 1x6) and Bhanuka Rajapaksa (65, 56b, 12x4) and a superb show by their spinners, Sri Lanka eked out a three-wicket consolation win against a spirited India - who were playing five debutants for the first time since 1980 - in the third and final ODI on Friday at the Premadasa Stadium in Colombo.

While the ODI scoreline finished 2-1 in India’s favour, Sri Lanka will take some heart from their first win over India in 10 ODIs at home- it was the first time they beat the Asian giants on their home turf since July 24, 2012! It should boost them going into the opening T20 International between the teams.

A superb effort by leg-spinner Rahul Chahar (3-54) and his fellow debutant, left-arm seamer Chetan Sakaria (2-34), kept India in the game, as the Lankans lost a flurry of wickets towards the close. However, the bowlers didn’t have enough runs to defend.

India were also left to rue a spate of chances they spilled in the field.

After Gowtham, another debutant, had Minod Bhanuka (7) sweeping to Sakaria at square leg, Fernando - who slammed his second halfcentury on the trot which saw him become the series’ top run-getter (159 runs in three games@53.00) - and Rajapaksa added 109 in 105 balls to put the hosts in control. The partnership ended when Rajapaksa was caught brilliantly by Gowtham at deep backward square-leg off Sakaria.

The Saurashtra seamer then caught de Silva off his own bowling, foxing the batsman with a trademark back-of-the-hand slower one. Hardik Pandya also took a wicket, but went for 43 in five overs.

Earlier, India slipped badly from a strong position, losing nine wickets for 123 runs as Sri Lanka’s spinners triggered a tremendous fightback to skittle out the visitors for 225 in 43.1 overs after the game was reduced to 47 overs to each side post a rain interruption With Prithvi Shaw (49, 45b) and Sanju Samson (46, 45b) going great guns, India were cruising at 102 for one in the 16th over, before spinners Akila Dananjaya and Praveen Jayawickrama took three wickets each on a pitch aiding turn to leave the visitors tottering at 195 for eight in the 33rd over. A dogged 29-run partnership for the ninth wicket between Navdeep Saini and Rahul Chahar enabled India to reach 225.

While the batsmen showed poor application against spin, what would disappoint coach Rahul Dravid more is that three batsmen - Shaw, Samson and Suryakumar Yadav (40, 37b,) - fell in the 40s. Also concerning is the poor form of Hardik Pandya (19), who missed the line of a turning delivery by a mile to be out lbw to Jayawickrama.

World Test Championship

Ahmedabad: India wins series 3-1, enters WTC final

K ShriniwasRao, March 7, 2021: The Times of India

India vs New Zealand, Ahmedabad- test match, India wins series 3-1, enters WTC final
From: March 7, 2021: The Times of India
Scoreboard, India vs New Zealand, Ahmedabad- test match, 2021
From: K ShriniwasRao, March 7, 2021: The Times of India


'See graphics:

India vs New Zealand, Ahmedabad- test match, India wins series 3-1, enters WTC final

Scoreboard, India vs New Zealand, Ahmedabad- test match, 2021

Temperatures have been soaring here to such an extent that even the Sabarmati flowing from right next to Motera can’t keep things cool anymore. After grinding it out for close to 262 minutes between Friday and Saturday in these conditions, and facing 174 balls, the very impressive Washington Sundar was left stranded at 96, four runs short of what would’ve been an excellent century.

As badly as that would have hurt, Sundar can instead take respite from the fact that his innings eventually helped India win the fourth Test by an innings and 25 runs and pocket the series 3-1 to book their much-deserving place in the World Test Championship (WTC) final later this year. India now lead the WTC table with 520 points after playing six series and winning four of them, while New Zealand, having played five series and won three, have 420 points.

Coming back to the Test, it was painful to watch Washington take the long walk back to the dressing room after he ran out of partners. His 106-run partnership with fellow-spinner Axar Patel – India’s second-highest in this Test after the 113-run stand between Pant and Washington – had all but taken the game away from England.

On a track where he batted with effortlessness against pace and spin, England crumbled to bits in 54.5 overs. The pitch cannot be blamed this time. It was just poor batting. The batsman in Patel too joined the part alongside Washington. His 97-ball 43 was a patient knock that allowed both batting partners to settle down well in the early half of the day and take the toll on England. By the time England walked out to bat, even the gatekeepers at this newly constructed stadium knew they wouldn’t be working early morning on Sunday. Barring Joe Root’s rickety 30 and Dan Lawrence’s 50, none of the English batsmen went past 15. Crawley 5, Sibley 3, Bairstow duck (golden), Stokes 2, Pope 15, Foakes 13 – fell like nine-pins. Each dismissal, the result of an error caused by a relentless and skilful spin attack. Coach Ravi Shastri heaped generous praise on his team and said the eventual score-line did justice to how India have played Test cricket over the last couple of years, also adding how the entire Indian camp would now look forward to the Test Championship final.It’s been an arduous journey for this team and the coaching and support staff, staying inside bio-bubbles without any contact with the outside world for close to three-and-half-months and facing serious challenges on and off the field.

“These are tough times. We’ve not seen anything like this since the second world war. They’ve overcome all challenges to be here and achieve this. It’s been simply magnificent,” Shastri told match broadcasters after the game. To bring about their series performances to a perfect culmination of sorts, Ravichandran Ashwin and Axar Patel — both bowlers having got to England’s nerves the last two weeks – walked away with five wickets each in the second innings. Ashwin, in the process, recording his 30th five-wicket haul.

Pant for his brilliant, game-changing century and some remarkable wicketkeeping, and Ashwin for his 32 wickets and 189 runs, were named the Man of the Match and the Man of the Series.

India loses World Test Championship final to NZ

Partha Bhaduri, June 24, 2021: The Times of India

Indian batsmen in WTC cycle, as in June 2021
From: Partha Bhaduri, June 24, 2021: The Times of India
Scoreboard, World Test Championship final, June 2021
From: Partha Bhaduri, June 24, 2021: The Times of India


And in the end, under the bright Southampton sky, there was only gloom for India as a deserving New Zealand basked in the glow of being crowned first-ever world Test champions.

It was a tense, nervy affair throughout with the ball dominating, but the safe bats of Kane Williamson and Ross Taylor eventually guided this golden generation of Kiwi cricketers past a paltry yet tricky target of 139 and to an 8-wicket win, the team’s first ICC title since 2000, also against India in Nairobi.

The runs didn’t come easy after R Ashwin cracked the top order open, but the target was too small, the Kiwi resolve too great and the overs available, ironically after two days of washout, simply too many. Bumrah dropping Williamson, and Pujara dropping Taylor at slip, were late reminders of India’s miserable day.

India simply couldn’t bat long enough. The fact that Virat Kohli’s men lost inside four days of actual cricket will give them pause ahead of the long English summer. The Kiwis clearly had the edge in these conditions and started as favourites, but hindsight can be a merciless beast.

The lack of match practice in England hurt them but shouldn’t India have played an extra batsman in Hanuma Vihari? Should Mohammed Siraj have got a game? What could the batsmen have done to upset the rhythm of the relentless Kiwi pacers?

Importantly, how can Virat Kohli silence his inner demons against the sizeable abilities of Kyle Jamieson, who bowled 84 balls to India’s captain in the WTC cycle, gave away 30 runs and dismissed him thrice, including twice here?

When will the Indian middleorder (Nos. 3, 4 and 5 averaged 24 in this Test) rediscover form? Can opener Shubman Gill, who averages 12.66 from his last 7 innings, turn it around soon? And how many times will Nos. 9, 10 and 11, who average 21 since 2018, the worst in the world, be required to make contributions with the bat overseas?

The answers will arrive in due course but it will rankle this proud Indian team, which has towered over the rest of the Test pack for a few years now, that this was their game to save on the sixth morning. They faltered, providing only an erratic exhibition of batsmanship, full of either circumspection or injudicious strokeplay.

Only Rishabh Pant’s out-of-thebox survival tactics, stemming from a bizarre mix of bravado, adrenaline and sheer anxiety, offered hope. Dropped by Southee at second slip on 5, Pant walked brazenly into Wagner’s deliveries and tried countering the bowler’s sustained short-ball barrage with reverse pulls and unique ramp shots. It was an original approach but not the calm touch India needed and it was never meant to last.

Add a couple of dismissals against the run of play, bats hanging out to dry, and it is clear why India folded for 170 in their second innings. Their hesitancy was testimony to the Kiwi attack’s rare ability to plant the seed of doubt in the batsmen.

Kohli, anxious about the nip-backer from Jamieson, was first beaten repeatedly by deliveries which held their line, later inducing the loose shot to a wide one angling away. Kohli’s caution was understandable, since from the start of 2018 he averages only 22.35 against balls deviating into him, and he batted a long way down to negate the LBW. That he fell fishing would have infuriated him.

Pujara, meanwhile, didn’t commit to a defensive shot and there was another strange, soft dismissal for Rahane.

Plans will be redrawn ahead of the England Tests. For the moment, India have slipped when it mattered, leaving them to wonder what could have been if this WTC Final had been staged at home. No one, after all, remembers who came second.

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