Get Instant News Updates
Enable
x
Notification Settings X
Time Settings
Done
Clear Notification X
Do you want to clear all the notifications from your inbox?
Settings X
For Quick Alerts
ALLOW NOTIFICATIONS  
For Daily Alerts
 

Battle of Virat Kohli and Anderson key to India's chances in Test series: Graeme Swann

Former England spinner Graeme Swann believes India have a good chance in Test series against England provided Virat Kohli tames Anderson

By Unnikrishnan
Graeme Swann believes India have a good chance of winning the Test series against England

London, July 20: Former off-spinner Graeme Swann foresees a strong Indian comeback in the Test series against England if the ball fails to swing, the chances of which are high due to a warmer-than-usual English summer.

India lost the ODI series 1-2, giving England the bragging rights ahead of the five-match Test rubber starting August 1. But Swann said things might just change for the better for the visitors in the longest format.

"If the ball doesn't swing, England will have to rely on reverse swing later on. Jimmy (James Anderson) is not the same bowler with the older ball because by the time it starts reverse swinging, Kohli will be 60-70 not out," Swann said.

"England did well last time because Jimmy had the new ball swinging. It's just not Indians who don't do well against swing. Every batsman in the world doesn't like it when the ball swings around especially when Anderson is bowling," he said.

"If it swings, England will win the Test series easily but if it doesn't, and I don't think it will, I think it will be a brilliant series. England don't have a great spin attack in the Test series, so again India hold all the aces in that department too," he said.

Swann said Kuldeep Yadav should play in the first Test ahead of either R Ashwin or Ravindra Jadeja. But he also warned against over-exposing the left-arm wrist spinner.

"If I was an Indian, I would desperately want him to play in the Tests because he does provide mystery and the English batsmen cannot pick his googly. He also bowls a good length and went for just 20-odd on a beautiful batting wicket at Nottingham. He doesn't give the batsmen enough opportunity to see the ball off pitch, and can hit a perfect length and pace," Swann said.

"If India use him wisely, he could be a massive bowler for them this summer, particularly if it continues to stay dry. This is where some caution is needed. He has bowled well, but he has also come up against two very poor teams against wrist spin in South Africa and England.

"So, my advice would be to not get carried away and put too much pressure on Kuldeep that he has to perform and do well always, which I thought happened in the latter half of the ODI series," he added.

But Swann said he would definitely start Yadav ahead of Ashwin and Jadeja, because it wasn't necessary to field both the latter two in English conditions.

"It is a tough call. But I would want to look and say 'whom do England want to face? When playing in India, that answer would be Ashwin and Jadeja a hundred percent, and they would be my first two names on the sheet. In England, are they still the first two names?

"You look at their records from the past and what they bring to the team. You don't have to play both of them, you can play just one. If I were blessed with a wrist spinner to pick, I would always personally put a wrist spinner in," he said.

Swann said Kohli would be eager to right the wrongs from his last trip.

"He (Kohli) is probably embarrassed by the last tour here because he is such a good player and that was not the Virat Kohli we know. He probably wants to right that wrong. And it is in his favour at the moment because the ball is not swinging.

"The hot weather we have been having, it is unseasonal, and there is no moisture around in the air or in the ground. That makes the ball swing in England and it has not been swinging," said Swann.

Swann said India's middle-order problems are an offshoot of their in-form top-order, including the struggle of MS Dhoni, who didn't bat well during the last two ODIs.

"I don't think it is down to form but more down to the change in pitches...it is not easy to keep adjusting even for a player who is as experienced or as good as Dhoni," he said.

"It often happens when your top-order is so powerful that guys later on in the middle don't get a go (regularly). So when India win...It can sometimes mess up the middle order because they don't get so many balls on the bat," he signed off.

(With Agency inputs)

Story first published: Friday, July 20, 2018, 17:16 [IST]
Other articles published on Jul 20, 2018