Five options for openers, nine for fast bowlers in Test cricket: Indian cricket’s happy problem of plenty across formats | Cricket News – Times of India

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Indian cricket finds itself in an enviable position these days as far as player options are concerned. It’s no secret that the bench strength of Indian cricket looks very good. So much so that someone like T Natarajan went from net bowler to strike bowler in the limited overs series and then the Test series in Australia and did very well.
Across all three formats, selectors and the team management have a happy problem of plenty on their hands. Head coach Ravi Shastri in fact recently said in response to a question asked by TOI that India can field two separate playing XIs on the field.
With more and more youngsters taking the IPL route to prove their worth, multiple players are now knocking on the doors of the National team in all formats. The competition currently is the staunchest in T20 cricket. However, even in the longest format, young players like Shubman Gill, Washington Sundar and Axar Patel are making a very strong case for themselves.
While some players like Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, Cheteshwar Pujara, R Ashwin, Jasprit Bumrah and a few others are always first choice picks depending on the format etc, there is a lot of competition for a spot in the Indian playing XI.
Multiple uncapped players are also knocking on the door.
TimesofIndia.com takes a look at the various contenders for a playing XI berth across all three formats here. This includes regular first choice picks and those who are also good candidates, including uncapped players.
The lists are divided into six categories – Openers, middle order (numbers 3-5), all-rounders, wicket-keepers, spinners and fast bowlers. Take a look:
INDIA’S HAPPY PROBLEM OF PLENTY IN TESTS:
This list has 5 openers, 5 middle order batsmen, 3 all-rounders, 5 wicket-keepers (2 uncapped), 5 spinners and 9 fast bowlers:

00:49India’s happy problem of plenty in Tests

India's happy problem of plenty in Tests

INDIA’S HAPPY PROBLEM OF PLENTY IN ODIS:
This list has 3 openers, 5 middle order batsmen, 3 all-rounders, 4 wicket-keepers, 4 spinners and 7 fast bowlers

00:42India’s happy problem of plenty in ODIs

India's happy problem of plenty in ODIs

INDIA’S HAPPY PROBLEM OF PLENTY IN T20IS:
This list has 3 openers, 5 middle order batsmen, 5 all-rounders, 4 wicket-keepers, 6 spinners and 13 fast bowlers

00:49India’s happy problem of plenty in T20Is

India's happy problem of plenty in T20Is

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Pant reaches career-best seventh position in ICC Test rankings, Ashwin moves up to second | Cricket News – Times of India

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DUBAI: Following his breathtaking century in the fourth Test against England, young Indian wicketkeeper batsman Rishabh Pant on Wednesday achieved a career-best seventh position in the ICC Test rankings.
Pant has jumped seven places after smashing a match-winning 101 in the Ahmedabad Test, which India won by an innings and 25 runs to clinch the series 3-1.
The 23-year-old shares the seventh place in the batsmen rankings with compatriot Rohit Sharma, who moved up one spot, and Henry Nicholls of New Zealand.

Washington Sundar, who also played a crucial role in India’s passage to the final of the ICC World Test Championship, has gained 39 places and is in 62nd position, thanks to his 96 not out, but captain Virat Kohli and Cheteshwar Pujara had below-par series.
Kohli, who remains fifth, is at his lowest points tally since November 2017 while Pujara (13th) is under 700 rating points for the first time since September 2016.
Indian spin duo of Ravichandran Ashwin and Axar Patel, who ripped through the England innings time and again during the series, also made it memorable in the bowlers’ rankings.
Ashwin, the player of the series, has leapfrogged New Zealand’s Neil Wagner to the second position among bowlers, the first time since August 2017, after finishing with eight wickets in the match.

He is also ranked fourth among all-rounders, now ahead of Shakib Al Hasan.
Patel’s nine wickets have lifted him eight places to 30th with 552 rating points. Only two bowlers have achieved more points after their first three Tests – former India leg-spinner Narendra Hirwani (564) and Australia fast bowler Charlie Turner (553) who played in the 19th century.
For England, Dan Lawrence has moved up 47 places to 93rd among batsmen with scores of 46 and 50 and James Anderson has moved up two places to fourth position after his haul of three for 44 in Ahmedabad.

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India vs England: Hosts ‘completely’ out skilled visitors, admits Vaughan | Cricket News – Times of India

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AHMEDABAD: While Michael Vaughan had criticised the pitch in the pink-ball game, the former England skipper admitted that India outplayed the visitors on the opening day of the fourth and final Test at the Narendra Modi Stadium on Thursday.
Spinners Axar Patel and Ravichandran Ashwin spun a web over visitors as England was bundled out for 205 in the first innings. Vaughan praised the hosts and slammed a very “average” batting by England in the first innings on day one of the final Test.
“India today with the ball showed why they are so good in these conditions … Pitch did very little for 60 overs and they completely out-skilled & out-thought England … !! High class … England with the Bat were very very average,” Vaughan tweeted.

In reply to England’s 205, Rohit Sharma and Cheteshwar Pujara showed great application as India ended the opening day of the fourth and final Test in the driver’s seat despite losing opener Shubman Gill in the third session.
After a disappointing show with the bat, England got off to a flying start with the ball as James Anderson struck with the third ball of the innings. The pace spearhead trapped Gill (0) in front of the stumps as India lost a wicket with no run on the board.
But Rohit and Pujara ensured that was the end of the visitors’ joy on the day as they played out the remaining 11.3 overs without losing any wicket.



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Pujara fit to open, Gill/Rohit at No. 3: Surinder Amarnath | Cricket News – Times of India

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AHMEDABAD: Surinder Amaranth, the oldest of the three Amaranth brothers and son of former India captain Lala Amarnath, feels cricket has changed considerably from his playing days.
The 72-year-old former dashing left-hander, who represented India in 10 Tests, is settled in Ahmedabad with his family, away from what he calls the “hustle-bustle” of Delhi, a team that he represented for the majority of his 22-year first-class career.
Amarnath, who scored a century on Test debut in Auckland in 1976, spoke to IANS on a variety of issues related to modern-day cricket.

Excerpts:
You batted No.3 for India. You were quite aggressive. Do you think that aggression is key for a No.3 batsman?
Back in our days, most of the No.3 batsmen were attacking, especially in top teams like West Indies, Australia. Even No.4 would be attacking. In my opinion, a No.3 batsman can destroy a bowler and that is his job. I think the No.4 batsman should also attack. How can a batsman destroy bowling unless and until he attacks right from the start? In the early phase of a team’s innings, the field is open. There is hardly anybody outside. There are more slips and gully fieldsmen, you also have close fielders. You don’t have too many fielders in deep. So the batsman can find open spaces to play. You don’t have to hit the ball hard. Just get in line and push a bit and the ball will travel for four. During my time, the No.3 batsman used to attack from the beginning. Viv Richards, Clive Lloyd, Garry Sobers — they all played at No. 3 or No. 4 during their prime. They were all attacking players. Likewise, Chappell for Australia.

But India have Cheteshwar Pujara at No.3. What do you make of it?
For the No.3 to be able to attack the opening pair has to be solid. The openers should be people who take fewer risks, leave the ball and play longer. The later batsmen can then come and destroy. I think Pujara can fit in as an opening batsman. I believe those who are solid in their approach, taking less risk, should open the innings. Pujara is good for that role. I think one of the two openers – either Rohit Sharma or Shubman Gill — could play at No. 3.
What is the difference between batting nowadays and back in your times?
I think there was a lot of wrist play earlier. In those days, some people did play with the forearm but more people used to play with wrists. I too used to play with wrists. Azharuddin and so many others, played with wrists. The wrists have to be very supple. But the demands of the game have changed. You want more forearm power to lift the ball. It also boils down to training. Players have strong forearms because there is a need to lift the ball nowadays.
Do you think it has affected playing spin?
With forearms like you have nowadays, you play cross-shots and tend to lift the ball. You tend to use the bottom hand more with those forearms. In our days, while playing the turning ball, we used to use the upper hand. We used to play with the upper hand and support with the lower hand. That would bring wrists into play. You needed strong wrists not forearms. Now they use the lower hand more and support it with the upper hand. It helps in lifting the ball.
You developed your wrists under your father, Lala Amarnath?
Dad used to have novel ways to train us. Our house in Delhi [near Connaught Place] had three gardens. One of them was reserved for our training. While we’d bat, dad would keep flower pots around us. A pot would be eight feet from the other, next one 10 feet and like that. If we would break it or crack it, then he would ask us to replace it with a new one. Place the plant in an empty pot. We wouldn’t want to do that, so we started finding gaps. Then, there was an empty patch of land near our house where we’d grow vegetables. Dad would give us gardening tools to dig the soil and plant trees. That was done to develop wrists. I’d train and run at the nearby Karnail Singh Stadium which was under dad’s responsibility back then. There was no equipment, no gym back then.
Has fitness changed nowadays from your time?
Yes, we never had trainers. Nowadays you have professional trainers. That is good, but I still feel we tend to overdo it by adapting too many things from other sports. A cricketer’s fitness is different. I will give an example from my time as consultant for Goa cricket body in 2012. We had a group of 30-35 players and only half of them were at nets. The rest were with the trainer. There was this Goa left-arm spinner Shadab Jakati [he played for Chennai Super Kings in IPL]. I saw him doing boxing with the trainer during a morning session. I told him to come to the nets in the evening. He didn’t turn up. The next day when he came I asked why didn’t he come. He said ‘my shoulder is stiff and I still can’t lift my arm’. I told him you don’t need to do this as a left-arm spinner. He said, ‘what can I do? This is our schedule’. You see the YoYo test these days. Lot of teams are now giving it up, because it is for another sport. Also, I am against lifting of weights, because I still believe the more weights you lift, the more stiff you get.
Another thing that has changed is the approach to short balls. When you see players like Phil Hughes succumbing to a short ball, how do you feel?
You get hurt only by a short ball and not by full ball. When we would face the short ball, we would go away from the ball and then either play it or leave it. Even then we would get hurt. I think what has changed now is the approach. The batsmen’s approach today is to go towards the ball on the front-foot and if the ball is short, they swing from there. If you are on back-foot, I would say you are in better control. When you commit yourself to the line of the ball, how will you get away? Your front-foot has gone ahead. How will you move your back-foot?
Do you think you didn’t get enough opportunities?
Every cricketer wants to play for long. Some people get chances, some don’t. In our case (three brothers), yes, because of my dad. He was outspoken in his days. But we kept coming back.

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