Former India captains Sunil Gavaskar and Ravi Shahstri have expressed
their astonishment at the manner in which India capitulated in the
just-concluded four-match Test series against England.
Gavaskar felt India, who came into the series as the number one team, did not live up to their billing. © AFP |
Trailing 0-3, India surrendered meekly after brave resistance by
Sachin Tendulkar and Amit Mishra on the final day of the final Test at
The Oval on Monday, to help England complete a 4-0 whitewash and
officially become the number one team in the world in the five-day
format.
"It was very disappointing. Everybody though it would be a great
series, but it was an abject surrender," Gavaskar, who is part of a
commentary team, said.
Gavaskar felt India, who came into the series as the number one team, did not live up to their billing.
"This was not the way a number one team plays. They normally lose by close margins, not like this," he added.
"Maybe the approach was wrong and the attitude wasn't there."
Gavaskar's colleague in the commentary box, Shastri attributed the drubbing to a combination of factors.
"It was a combination of a lot of factors - injuries, lack of form. But this is a rude wake-up call," Shastri said.
The former all-rounder, however, expressed hope of a revival.
"Tough guidelines should be in place and we should have a core group of players for all three formats of the game. You might not always have desirable stories but that's the way forward. That way, Indian cricket could get back on track in 6-8 months." he said.
"It was a combination of a lot of factors - injuries, lack of form. But this is a rude wake-up call," Shastri said.
The former all-rounder, however, expressed hope of a revival.
"Tough guidelines should be in place and we should have a core group of players for all three formats of the game. You might not always have desirable stories but that's the way forward. That way, Indian cricket could get back on track in 6-8 months." he said.
0 comments:
Post a Comment