Where shall I start? India's whitewash in New Zealand before the World Cup in South Africa? India's repeated failures in Sri Lanka? India not being to win a series against South Africa at home? Losing four wickets in ten balls (?) in the SCG? Then blaming Australia's cricketing spirit for the loss? India drawing matches with Harbhajan's batting against New Zealand at home? Batsman unable to chase to 185 runs in 48 overs? Then calling off a run chase with 85 to win from 90 balls? Settling for a "draw" against the same team with a series lead of 2-0 in the final test match? The most recent six straight overseas losses?
An avid cricket enthusiast should have no problem recalling each of the aforementioned situations. Considering the history of Team India since the 1999-2000 tour of Australia, I have decided to stop following cricket. After the second test match in Sydney, I've decided not to follow cricket, at least, until Dravid and Tendulkar retire. I have some respect for Laxman without whose knocks in South Africa and Sri Lanka, we'd have lost that misnomer - number one ranking - much earlier. However, it's time for Laxman to stop showing up for work. As for the two highest accumulators of runs in the history of test cricket, they just haven't been able to take this team forward. Twelve years ago, the very same batsmen were the reason behind a series whitewash in Australia. Today, they, and vicariously us, stare at the same fate. Yes, runs were scored. The true question is how many were scored when the stakes were high.
The last year has been the best to observe Australian cricket. This was a team supposed to be rebuilding, recovering from retirements. Despite fielding "weak teams", they were never whitewashed. Even in the last two Ashes series, they drew and won test matches. Comparing the Indian and the Australian cricket teams I get only answer. Our lows are lower than theirs, their highs higher than ours.
If you accept that we aren't a good team, we can discuss the reason. If you are willing to accept it, the reason for our failure is batting. Our strength is our weakness. Our batting heroes have the real culprits of all series overseas. Twice against West Indies, our batting was the reason we couldn't win. We lost a test series in Sri Lanka, where except Sehwag, the batting collectively failed. Our batsman presented Murali a soaring send-off. The same group let us down on the very first day at Centurion, and the final day at the SCG. The same group is the reason for the whitewash in England and the same looming outcome of the ongoing test series.
Last week, I just gave up. What is the reason for Dravid, Tendulkar and Laxman to play the remaining two test matches in Australia? The best outcome is a draw already, we did that under Ganguly. Another possible scoreline is 2-1, a result eked out with the leadership and tenacity of Kumble. I can't applaud a ton of tons which is the only motivation against retirement. I can't watch a series of dead bat defensive shots which only serve to boost the tally of most balls faced in test cricket. I refuse to watch another comeback from a batsman who has constantly played for his place. Although these sub-plots add drama to the sport, the story in the bigger picture has stagnated, or to quote Ganguly "taken a step backward."
I once heard Ian Chappell say that for the batting greats that India has, they don't have much to show for it in terms of wins. Shouldn't the parsimonious victories add a doubt to the greatness of these batsmen?
Can you believe l wrote so much about a sport I no longer follow?
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