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Dean Jones blames Rohit Sharma's defensive skills for his failure in Tests

Former Australia cricketer Dean Jones believes India batsman Rohit Sharma is technically sound but his defensive skills in the Test cricket are letting him down in.

Dean Jones blames Rohit Sharma's defensive skills for his failure in Tests

New Delhi, Jan 18: Former Australia cricketer Dean Jones believes India batsman Rohit Sharma is technically sound but his defensive skills in the Test cricket are letting him down in.

Barring their skipper and batting mainstay Virat Kohli, no Indian batsmen could offer any resistance to a potent South Africa pace attack in the first two Tests which they lost due to poor batting.

Sharma, who was preferred over vice-captain Ajinkya Rahane on "current form", too failed to justify his selection as he could aggregate just 78 runs in four innings at 19.50.

"I look at him and he is technically sound. But the first thing that goes wrong in your game is your defence, and his (Sharma's) defensive skills are letting him down," Jones said on Thursday (January 18).

"In Test cricket, 70 percent of batting is about your defence and in one-dayers, it is 40 percent. So his defensive skills are letting him down. He has got to take pride in his defensive skills like Sunil Gavaskar, Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and even Virat Kohli," he said further.

Sharma went into the South Africa series at the back of scintillating form against Sri Lanka at home, where he smashed a third double hundred in ODI and a joint-fastest century in T20 Internationals. It was his superb form with the bat that forced the team management to pick him over Rahane.

Jones said India needed a tough tour like South Africa to sort out their team selection.

"You need to have these kinds of tours to sort out your composition, to find out whether they are good enough or not. So maybe there has been too much reliance on his (Sharma's) ODI form but all in all you have to have a series like this to find out if they are good enough.

"If he misses out in the next series, Ravi (Shastri) and Kohli can say 'we gave you the opportunity'," said the 56- year-old, who was in the capital to promote the 'Visit Victoria' education and tourism campaign.

Former India captains like Ajit Wadekar and Bishan Singh Bedi attributed India's surrender in South Africa to lack of preparation and the fact that they went into the series opener at Newlands without a warm-up match.

Jones, however, has a different take on the touchy topic.

"The modern-day schedules are such that often there is no time for a warm-up game. But why should you only rely on that? I have spoken to the likes of VVS Laxman, who tells me he, Dravid and Tendulkar used to start preparing three months before touring Australia.

"Dealing with the bouncing ball and so on. So the players have got to take the responsibility individually (when it comes to preparation)," said Jones, who represented Australia in 52 Tests and 164 ODIs.

In India, he is best-known for his 210 in only the second tied Test in history, at Chennai in 1986.

The series in South Africa out of their grasp, Jones feels it is still not the time to judge the current Indian team, which is scheduled to tour England and Australia later this year.

"I think the structuring of the series (with no warm-up games) is such that once you lose the first Test, it is very tough to come back. You don't have many teams winning overseas anyway.

"I was researching on this, probably South Africa is the only team which has done well overseas in the past 10-15 years.

"You can be a hit harsh but it (series loss in SA) is not the be all and end all. No doubt Kohli and Ravi would have wanted things to go a bit better. South Africa is a hard place to win in. Australia have won on their last two tours there."

Looking ahead, Jones said the England tour will be a sterner test for the Indian batsmen as the pitches in Australia have become flat.

"Kohli can only make so many runs, you need other players to stand up. England tour is going to be interesting. There are some question marks about the guys' techniques. They can play well. Like Tendulkar and Dravid, you got guys like Rahane and Pujara who stay side on and watch the ball late.

(With inputs from PTI)

Story first published: Thursday, January 18, 2018, 18:10 [IST]
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