India Got Bowling Wrong, Under-Bowled Jadeja, Hints Sachin Tendulkar

Updated: Sat, Jun 26 2021 23:10 IST
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The Indian team management may have erred on the choice of bowling combination and under-bowled left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja in New Zealand's second innings in the World Test Championship (WTC) final, Sachin Tendulkar has hinted.

Tendulkar, who holds the record for most runs in Tests and ODIs, said on his Youtube channel that due to lack of sun on the first few days, the spinners never came into play, especially left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja who bowled only 7.2 overs in the first innings. Jadeja though bowled only eight overs in the second innings on the sixth day when sun was out.

"See when you play five bowlers, it is impossible that all five bowlers will get the same number of overs. It doesn't work that way. You have to take into consideration the pitch conditions, overhead conditions, the breeze, how much help the fast bowlers or spinners are getting and then accordingly you decide," said Tendulkar.

"As far as I am concerned with whatever I have seen, the sun was hardly out in this Test match. It was out on the fifth day and on the sixth day. By that time, a lot of time had gone."

 

Tendulkar said that while he understood the reasoning behind making Ashwin bowl more overs (15-5-28-2) than Jadeja (7.2-2-20-1) in the first innings as there were footmarks developed by New Zealand left-arm pace bowlers and the opposition had left-handed batsmen, he called Jadeja unlucky in the second innings.

"Jadeja's strength is stump-to-stump line. He attacks stumps, so LBW and bowled chances emerge. It wasn't a pitch [on days 1, 2, 3] where there would be turn and you could get a player out in slips," said Tendulkar implying that Jadeja was unpredictable.

"In the second innings, the ball jumped a bit here and there. That is where the pitch started favouring the spinner. He was unlucky there," added Tendulkar. The only man to score 100 international centuries added that the Southampton pitch suited pace bowlers and not spinners.

"If people didn't get equal opportunity, it was because fast bowlers were getting purchase. There are pitches for spinners, there are pitches for pacers. So you have to understand the conditions," said Tendulkar.

India played two spinners and three pacers whereas New Zealand went in with four-pronged pace attack. Colin de Grandhomme, a seam-bowling all-rounder, served as the fifth bowler. India lost the WTC final by eight wickets.

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