Different Strokes
 
 

| Indian Catching-4: The Australian Connection »

« Indian Catching-3: The present

Posted by Angshuman Hazra on 06/19/2006 in India

Indian Catching-3: The present

Right now India have two brilliant infielders from the one-day side Yuvraj Singh and Mohammad Kaif playing in Tests. "Wow - Yuvi and Kaifu? India must be having a great time pouching half chances!" Not quite! The principal areas of concern with Yuvraj and Kaif are highlighted in this post of Jagadish.

The two young men are indeed jumpy i.e. they fail to stay still and low till the last possible time, flaws that define the line between ordinary and great catchers that have prowled near the bat. They are still on the learning curve but their fumbles stand out in a setup that offers little cover for them.

Laxman looks like having lost some of his reflexes and / or concentration, and it has come earlier in his career than expected. The decline shows in his recent batting displays. [I wish I could explain how sad that is from a personal point of view, and how desperately I want to be proven wrong.]

Jaffer is passable as a fielder but from whatever little we saw so far he has some way to go to be called a good slip catcher. Jaffer is missing a few on slower tracks because he has problems with catches requiring a lunge to the front. Quite the same with Yuvraj and Laxman. Sehwag is as inconsistent in positions around the stumps as he is brilliant in front of it, armed with a bat.

As for Dravid, he remains a steady slipper but he is not getting any younger. Also, with his skipper's cap on he keeps grassing a few critical ones every now and then. Understandable, that. Not everyone can aspire to match Tubby Taylor, the iconic Australian slipper-skipper of 1990's who struggled with batting form for prolonged periods and faced the axe but seldom spilt a catch or missed a captaincy beat.

[next: The Australian Connection]

Comments

Hey Angs,
The past couple of test series have made us realize how necessary is it to have good close in fielders.

The last test in Mumbai and the first two in West Indies just drive home the point further.

Yuvraj seems to have improved quite a bit from what we sawa against Englad.

One of the brilliant close in fielders which we had in recent times was Aakash Chopra. He was the key to the sucess in Australia and Pakistan by plucking some smart chances.

Guru Greg certainly needs to work on this aspect of our game, he was a natural slip fielder and its time that we groomed some one to take over the important positions and the best bet seem to be Yuvraj and Kaif.

Posted by: Parameshwaran at June 19, 2006 6:34 PM

Good point Param; Akash Chopra has an entire post devoted to him in this series!

Posted by: Angshuman hazra at June 20, 2006 7:18 AM

Post your comment:




   
Cricinfo.com
  Live Coverage
Fixtures and results
Match/series Archive
News Index
Photo Index
Stats Guru
Players/Officials
Grounds
Records
About Us
Web Feeds
   
Blogs Home
   
  Different Strokes is a group blog written by selected Cricinfo readers. None of the content here represents the views of Cricinfo. Click here for more.
  Anantha
Angshuman Hazra
Arun Kumar
Chandrahas Choudhury
Chris Fogarty
Gaurav Sabnis
Jai Arjun Singh
Ken Tinker
Krishna Kumar
Lahar Appaiah
Scott Wickstein
Zainub Razvi
  2007 World Cup
About Different Strokes
Ashes Series 2006/07
Australia
Bangladesh
Bowling
Commentary
England
ICC
India
India-Pakistan
International Cricket Council
Live commentary
Miscellaneous
New Zealand
Pakistan
Players' Hairstyles
Socio-Cricket Issues
Sri Lanka
The Players
Mavericks
Umpires
West Indies
  I broke Marcus Trescothick
Wanted: batting strike rates on players' stats
It's not what you say...
Swinging in confusion
A nice celebration for a 1st anniversary
Nehra and Mongia - A case of incongruous pragmatism?
As the Crowe flies in the wrong direction...
Cricket World Cup ‘07: An early set of predictions
The Lankan Leap
The 6-6-6 men for Australian batsmen
  Beyond the Test world
The Surfer
Wicket to Wicket
  November 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
December 2008

Sun

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat

  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31      
   
 
 

'Cricket should talk'

Anil Kumble on what it's like to be India's Test captain


'I didn't go out and bat as captain'

Talking Cricket - 2: Mark Taylor on Allan Border's legacy


Beware the football threat

Jayaditya Gupta on the IPL v EPL battle


'Why would you want to play five days for a draw?'

Talking Cricket: Mark Taylor on the art of captaincy


Rearguard to the rescue

The Numbers Game looks at the best lower-order pairs



 
  The Guardian
The Daily Telegraph
The Times
The Independent
The Age
Sydney Morning Herald
cricket20
The Australian
NZ Herald
SuperSport
BBC
Rediff