Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Have India erred by not hiring SA consultant?

- HT@ SOUTH AFRICA SOMSHUVRA LAHA

JOHANNESBU­RG: Touring a country outside the subcontine­nt presents its own set of problems. The maximum a willing host may provide are a few practice games and local bowlers at every Test venue. India though were bold enough to opt out of the only practice game in Paarl ahead of the South Africa series and focus on playing among themselves instead. As the top Test nation, they couldn’t be faulted for believing in their ability to adapt quickly, though the decision is now being questioned in the wake of their 2-0 loss.

But did India miss a bigger trick by not seeking a former South African cricketer as consultant for this series? With a number of former South Africa players available and some of the more prominent faces commentati­ng in this series, it’s difficult to believe India wouldn’t have found someone.

The concept isn’t new. The idea of hiring consultant­s on a shortterm basis has been embraced more by teams outside Asia. Teams like Australia have explored this option ahead of every tour though the results haven’t gone their way often. Like when they had appointed Muttiah Muralithar­an as spin consultant for their tour of Sri Lanka in 2016. Sri Lanka went to win all three Tests by big margins but Australia hadn’t given up on the idea.

When it was time for the India series, not only did Australia hire Monty Panesar — who had wrecked havoc for England in the 2012 tour of India — but also got on board S Sriram as spin consultant. India did win the series 2-1 but till the third Test, Australia had done well to hold them 1-1. Before that series, India hosted England who had brought along Saqlain Mushtaq to guide their spinners.

Asian teams, in comparison, haven’t explored this idea much. Last year, Sri Lanka had appointed Allan Donald as bowling consultant during the Champions Trophy but apart from that, there haven’t been many instances of foreigners being assigned specific roles ahead of major tours. Foreign coaches have flocked to the IPL but when it comes to national duty, the BCCI hasn’t been open to giving even a part-time role to one of them.

Not that India don’t have specific overseas consultant­s already. Zaheer Khan and Rahul Dravid were signed as bowling mentor and batting consultant but while Dravid is in New Zealand with the U-19 team, it’s not known why Zaheer didn’t fly with the team. Had there been a South African consultant, India could have prepared better for the Cape Town Test and maybe even got their selection right after analysing a unique Centurion pitch.

Brief scores: England 383/7 (Banks 120, Jacks 102; Jamkhandi 3/68, Pretorius 3/69) bt Canada 101 (Sisodiya 3/23, Finch 2/10, Hollman 2/21, Walker 2/25) by 282 runs

New Zealand 279/8 (Ravindra 76, Bhula 44, Phillips 43; Molefe 2/49) bt South Africa 208 (Rolfes 108, Du Plessis 54; Ravindra 4/32) by 71 runs West Indies 318/ 7 (Athanaze 116*, Melius 60; Desai 3/54) bt Kenya 96 (Gandhi 37, Yadram 5/18, Royal 4/25) by 222 runs

Ireland 225/8 (Tector 36; Ahmad 3/32, Wafadar 3/50) bt Afghanista­n221 (Bahir 34, Stanikzai 33; Tector 3/37) by four runs.

 ?? GETTY ?? ▪ Zaheer Khan’s expertise could have helped in South Africa.
GETTY ▪ Zaheer Khan’s expertise could have helped in South Africa.

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