England v India, 4th ODI, Lord's
India still seek elusive win
The Preview by Sidharth Monga
September 10, 2011
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Match facts
September 11, Lord'sStart time 1015 (0915 GMT)
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Big Picture
India landed in England on July 13. Over the last two months they have
lost eight players to injuries, many others have lost form, and an equal
number didn't even bring it to begin with. Their No. 1 ranking is gone,
the Twenty20 international was lost, and now they can't even win the
ODI series. The frightening part for them is that things could still get
worse from here. This match is their last chance to win an
international in England; the final game is in Wales.
In terms of disastrous tours, this one ranks right up there with the
ones to Australia in 1991-92 and 1999-2000, to South Africa in 1996-97
and to the West Indies in 1989 (leaving aside the tours before India
started winning Tests). Yet, except for the West Indies in 1989, they
managed to win something on the other tours. Here all the silverware
they carry is Rahul Dravid's Man-of-the-Series award in Tests and
Ravindra Jadeja's Man-of-the-Match from The Oval ODI. It could still be
argued, a bit cruelly, that for all his heroics, Dravid wouldn't have
won his award but for the England norm to present a series award to a
player from both teams.
Then again cruel is what this trip has been. The weather has interrupted
at crucial moments, killing the first ODI with India in ascendency,
reducing the second to a near T20, a format where England are world
champions. It could be argued that the Duckworth-Lewis method helped
India in the third ODI, but their momentum was stalled just when they
were making a comeback and the damp outfield negated the spinners to an
extent.
All that doesn't mask England's ruthlessness at the fag end of a long
season. If they stunned India with their unwavering will in the Test
series, complacency and contentment have been conspicuous by their
absence so far in the ODIs. Unlike their winter Ashes tour, where they
emptied their tank in the Tests, England have fuel left in reserve here.
Craig Kieswetter has brought freshness to the top of the order and the
pitch for The Oval ODI suggests they can produce green tracks without
any fear of a backlash from India's attack.
Lord's, though, is usually a flat track, but weather forecasts that
suggest a 60% chance of precipitation could spell further trouble for
the visitors. If it helps, two of India's most famous wins have come at
Lord's: the World Cup final of 1983 and the 326-run chase in the 2002
NatWest final.
Form guide
(Completed matches, most recent first)England WWWWW
India LLLLW
In the spotlight
Even in the worst of circumstances, even when India are fielding with
the opposition at 700 for 2, there is one man who suggests there is no
place he'd rather be. Suresh Raina
showed more of that in the field at The Oval, when the specialist
spinners were all but bowled out. He tied the batsmen down with the
ball, dived around all over the place in the field, and delayed
England's eventual win. However, it's with the bat that he can lack the
will to fight through long testing periods. It's possible he is the
designated counter-attacker in the ODIs, but starting with the West
Indies tour, he has been out too many times trying to slog in the middle
overs to continue to play the same way and must adapt to the situation
once in a while. Of course, there are doubts as to whether he has the
game to do that.
When James Anderson
gets it right, he can win ODIs on his own. He was a man who would have
rather been elsewhere during the World Cup on flat tracks in the
subcontinent. On helpful tracks, though, he is back to enjoying it with
the ball and in the field, where he is as good as they make fast
bowlers. All he needs now is killer final spells at the death.
Team news
England's batting can prove shaky against turn even in England, but they
aren't likely to change the XI that won at The Oval. If at all, they
could call in Samit Patel for Ben Stokes, who is not bowling at the
moment and whose early rushes against spin haven't been too encouraging.
Ravi Bopara has surely earned himself another game after a 41-ball 40,
and as has been the case with Bopara, it is one game at a time.
England (probable): 1 Craig Kieswetter (wk), 2 Alastair Cook
(capt), 3 Jonathan Trott, 4 Ian Bell, 5 Ravi Bopara, 6 Ben Stokes, 7 Tim
Bresnan, 8 Graeme Swann, 9 Stuart Broad, 10 James Anderson, 11 Jade
Dernbach
India's ordinary bowling pushed them out of their comfort zone, and it
proved to be a good thing. Less than a day after his arrival in India,
the bowling allrounder Ravindra Jadeja held onto the champagne given to
the Man of the Match. He will surely play at No. 7, but will India
continue to tease those who have been clamouring for a debut to Varun
Aaron, who is supposed to have pace? If that happens, at whose expense
will it happen, RP Singh or Munaf Patel?
India (probable): 1 Ajinkya Rahane, 2 Parthiv Patel, 3 Rahul
Dravid, 4 Virat Kohli, 5 Suresh Raina, 6 MS Dhoni (capt/wk), 7 Ravindra
Jadeja, 8 R Ashwin, 9 Praveen Kumar, 10 and 11 two out of Munaf Patel,
RP Singh and Varun Aaron
Pitch and conditions
Expect a flat pitch at Lord's, but overhead conditions are likely to be
grey with spells of rain. Add to it an early start, and conditions - as
it should be - hand an advantage to the home side.
Stats and trivia
- India have managed just four century partnerships across all the
international games on the tour combined. England managed four in the
first Test alone.
- India have won four and lost two ODIs at Lord's.
- Captaincy has made MS Dhoni a more responsible batsman; his strike-rate as captain falls to 82 from an overall 87. Alastair Cook has had to prove a point vis-à-vis his pace, and strikes at 96 per 100 balls as captain as opposed to 78 overall.
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