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Before the long Test season of 2016-17 began, commentators and observers were largely in agreement on a few basic points:
Well, 13 Tests later, most of them utterly riveting, I’m inclined to amend all of them:
So much for conventional wisdom. The man of the series, Ravindra Jadeja, proved to be a revelation: he has improved his bowling dramatically, but his batting has acquired new dimensions altogether of control and responsibility.
And yet there was genuine competition for the man of the series: Steve Smith could of course have won it for his three centuries, and he probably would have, if India hadn’t triumphed in the series despite his heroics. Equally important, KL Rahul, with six fifties at the top of the order, and that run-machine Cheteshwar Pujara were also seriously in contention and their performances justified it.
Neither Kohli nor Ashwin came close, which means the Indian side is not dependent on one or two star performers; pretty much everyone pulled their weight in difficult situations, some (like Vijay) only once, some (like Umesh Yadav, a revelation) almost every time.
Also Read: In Stats: How Team India Covered for Virat Kohli’s Absence
Kohli showed us he’s mortal, and this may be a necessary step in the making of an all-time great. He seemed to have put his horror run in England in 2014 decisively behind him, as his performances since then have shown, but against Australia he actually managed to do even worse.
But Rahane, his polar opposite as a personality, did just as well as captain in his quiet and unobtrusive way.
It’s a reminder that every truly great team has reserves out there, in case the giants stumble. Repeatedly when Kohli failed at the crease, the team came together and found something in the tank to make up for it. We can breathe easier in future when Kohli fails, knowing there’s usually someone else (or a combination of someone elses) available to step up in his place.
In requesting me for this piece, the editor asked: “How much more do they need to achieve before staking claim to be India’s best-ever Test team?”
Plenty more, I’m afraid. That distinction is undoubtedly held by the team of just over a decade ago that featured, all at the same time, undoubted greats like Tendulkar, Dravid, Sehwag, Laxman, and Kumble, along with near-greats like Dhoni, Ganguly, Zaheer and Gambhir.
Several of Kohli’s players show signs of earning comparable accolades before long – but we must give them a lot more time to deserve the sobriquet of “greatest”.
At the same time, there are real grounds for not getting carried away in this moment of victorious celebration. India has had a great home season, but India has always been known to be difficult to beat at home.
The true test will only come later this year, when we travel in whites to less familiar conditions and sterner opposition. Green, pacy pitches have exposed the weak links in many a strong Indian side. If we can win abroad against Australia or South Africa in conditions not designed to favour us, we can truly begin to talk of cricketing greatness.
Many Indians are grateful for Virat’s aggression, but Rahane showed that you can be calm and win too. The Australians invented sledging, but the rest have all learned from them, and justify foul-mouthed profanity as reflecting their “intensity” or excuse it as psychological warfare, “getting under the opponent’s skin”.
This kind of gamesmanship should have no place in sport. I will not resort to cliches about the “gentleman’s game”, because that era is long gone, but civility and politeness should have no expiry date. Prasanna was no lesser a bowler because he applauded when a skilled batsman hit him for four.
A fielding captain congratulating his opposite number on a well-made century used to be a regular feature of the game. It was wholly absent from this team's greatest Test series win.
I understand the ICC is coming up with a system of demerit points that could lead to red cards and players being sent off for bad behaviour. As far as I’m concerned, the unnecessary unpleasantness that marred an otherwise magnificent series confirms that such a system cannot come too soon.
One final thought: Indian team, you played wonderfully well. But I have no idea why every single one of you, barring Kuldeep, chose to sport these repellent beards like a uniform. For God’s sake, go get a shave…
Also Read: India Show Australia Who’s Boss: Amrit Mathur
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Published: 29 Mar 2017,07:46 AM IST