close_game
close_game

No respite for Rohit Sharma as undercooked pink-ball plans fall flat as both captain and batter

Dec 07, 2024 08:29 PM IST

A return to the middle order has yielded scores of 3 and 6, which means Rohit now has been out for a single-digit score for 8th time in his last 12 Test innings

Rohit Sharma would like to forget Saturday in a hurry. Precious little went right for him as captain or and batter; it will come as scant consolation that in the former, his hands were shackled by the lack of adequate resources or that in the latter, he was the recipient of a fabulous delivery from Pat Cummins.

India's captain Rohit Sharma walks off the field after losing his wicket during the day two of the second Test against Australia.(AP)
India's captain Rohit Sharma walks off the field after losing his wicket during the day two of the second Test against Australia.(AP)

Rohit must have been aware, when he landed in Perth nearly two weeks back, that he would be judged not just against the nous Jasprit Bumrah showed in the first Test as stand-in skipper but also how he shaped up as a skipper-cum-batter in his own right. He had overseen an unprecedented home debacle against New Zealand, defeats in three successive home Tests bringing him just 91 runs. He did have the cushion of inheriting a 1-0 advantage going into the pink-ball Test in Adelaide, but Rohit wouldn’t have been under any illusion about the magnitude of the task that lay ahead of him.

First, the captaincy. Hailed as a players’ leader who reads the game superbly and is tactically shrewd, Rohit knew more than anyone else when play began on the second afternoon of the second Test that he had his work cut out. His two most experienced and accomplished pacers, Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj, hadn’t maximised the opportunity of using a new pink ball exclusively under lights the previous night. When Australia began on 86 for one after 33 overs in response to India’s 180, Rohit had to strike the right balance between attack and defence so that the game didn’t run away from India.

It didn’t help his cause that Bumrah had already bowled 11 overs and Siraj 10. Leadership isn’t just about thinking of immediate gains but also the not-so-long-term. With the third Test in Brisbane a week away, Rohit couldn’t afford to run his two pace spearheads into the ground in the best batting phase of the match.

Still, he kept at it, with great help from the pace duo. Bumrah took two wickets in his four-over first spell, Siraj was desperately unlucky to go wicketless despite seven stunning overs where he kept beating the bat. At 103 for three with the accomplished Steve Smith back in the hut, India might have sensed an opening, but with Bumrah and Siraj off the firing line, Travis Head slammed the slightly ajar door shut in their faces.

The spite and juice on a first-evening surface in Perth had worked to Harshit Rana’s advantage but in far more trying conditions, he came up short – literally. The young Delhi quick in his second Test spiralled after a promising start, bowling too short and too wide and allowed Head to pick him off with ridiculous ease and regularity. Rohit did give the young tyro protection in the deep, but Rana’s inconsistencies were pronounced enough for Head to pick his spots and score at an alarmingly rapid pace.

Having brought R Ashwin into the XI for his wicket-taking abilities, Rohit was forced to employ the off-spinner in a different role with no help forthcoming from the surface. Ashwin was tidy but couldn’t over-attack because the runs were flowing far too freely from the other end. There certainly was a case for Nitish Kumar Reddy getting more of a bowl, something Rohit will ponder over when he wonders what he could have done differently.

Rohit Sharma fails to make an impact in middle-order

As a batter, there’s not a lot he could have done against the wonder ball from his counterpart. Slanting in in the air, it drew Rohit forward. The captain seemed to have covered the line until the ball straightened at the very last second, decked just around his outside edge and kissed the outside of the off-stump. Rohit has been guilty of being flat-footed in the past, but there was nothing he could have done this time. Nothing most could, to be honest.

And yet, that doesn’t help, does it? The run of outs just keeps piling up. The bowleds and the leg befores are becoming more frequent, setting tongues wagging about the lack of footwork. Admittedly, as many experts have pointed out, the pink ball comes on to the batter quicker than expected, India don’t play as many day-night Tests as, say, Australia and therefore their batters find it harder to make the necessary adjustments quickly but again, that doesn’t count for much in professional sport.

A return to the middle order for the first time in six years has yielded scores of 3 and 6, which means Rohit now has been dismissed for a single-digit score for the eighth time in his last 12 Test innings. He will be the first to acknowledge that that simply is not good enough.

Recommended Topics
Stay informed with the latest updates on live cricket score, cricket players, match schedules and ICC rankings. Keep an eye on your favourite cricket team, including the stellar performances of Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli. Check out the cricket schedule, WTC 2025 Points Table track team standings and dive into player stats and rankings on Crickit powered by Hindustan Times website and app.
See More
Stay informed with the latest updates on live cricket score, cricket players, match schedules and ICC rankings. Keep an eye on your favourite cricket team, including the stellar performances of Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli. Check out the cricket schedule, WTC 2025 Points Table track team standings and dive into player stats and rankings on Crickit powered by Hindustan Times website and app.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON
SHARE
Story Saved
Live Score
Saved Articles
Following
My Reads
Sign out
New Delhi 0C
Wednesday, January 22, 2025
Start 14 Days Free Trial Subscribe Now
Follow Us On