Key Points

Manjrekar believes India faced unfair conditions as gloomy skies during their batting gave way to sunshine for England's innings. The commentator praised debutant Kamboj for showing potential despite being targeted by Duckett on a flat pitch. He noted India's pace attack struggled unusually, with even Bumrah looking ineffective. The analysis suggests India missed opportunities by introducing spin too late against England's dominant openers.

Key Points: Manjrekar says India unlucky with Manchester weather as Kamboj shows promise

  • Manjrekar highlights stark weather contrast between India's batting and England's innings
  • Praises Kamboj's resilience despite Duckett's aggressive targeting
  • Notes Bumrah's uncharacteristic struggle on eased pitch
  • Questions delayed spin introduction as England built 166-run opening stand
3 min read

Manjrekar feels India hard done by weather gods; feels Kamboj showed signs of potential

Sanjay Manjrekar criticizes weather shift favoring England in 4th Test while praising debutant Anshul Kamboj's potential despite tough conditions.

"What this tells us is that India were a bit hard done by the weather gods - Sanjay Manjrekar"

New Delhi, July 25

Former cricketer-turned-commentator Sanjay Manjrekar believes India were hard done by Manchester's weather at Old Trafford and should be "glad" to end the second day with two wickets in the fourth Test against England in Manchester.

Under the gloomy sky of Manchester, India struggled to conjure runs in the first innings on the opening day. Many perished in front of the lively seam movement, while the rest surrendered to England's short-ball ploy. Despite the tricky surface, India managed to reach 358.

When England came out to bat, the atmosphere changed as clouds disappeared from the sky, allowing the sun to shine over Old Trafford. India had the new ball to make up for the sudden shift in the situation, but straying away from the line didn't help their cause, and they eventually lost the plot.

"What this tells us is that India were a bit hard done by the weather gods. During their batting, there were dark grey clouds, some moisture -- it looked like a black-and-white movie at one point. But today, the pitch really eased up, and the skies cleared," Manjrekar said on JioHotstar.

"Suddenly, it looked like a completely different Test match. England could very well get a big score, because even someone like Jasprit Bumrah found it hard to bowl a wicket-taking delivery on this surface. So yes, India will be glad they got those two wickets when they did," he added.

England openers Zak Crawley and Ben Duckett tormented India's pace unit and then switched their attention to the spinners. The world's best Jasprit Bumrah looked ineffective, Mohammed Siraj ran out of steam, and debutant Anshul Kamboj put in the hard yards, finding his rhythm. Kamboj arrived in Manchester after India lost Nitish Kumar Reddy, Arshdeep Singh and Akash Deep to injuries and was straightaway drafted into the final XI.

Kamboj bowled in tandem with Bumrah to spearhead India's pace attack. While Bumrah kept Crawley and Duckett silent, Kamboj failed to keep them chained with his wayward spell. By the time Gill introduced spinners and Ravindra Jadeja removed the towering Crawley, the duo had raised a 166-run stand for the opening wicket.

"It's tough, especially for someone making his debut. Ben Duckett was merciless and targeted Kamboj just because he was new. There wasn't much in the pitch for him. Bumrah looked the least threatening he has this entire series -- so we have to see the other bowlers in that light too," he said.

"Shardul Thakur bowled a few good balls, but there's always a boundary around the corner with him. That will be a problem for India -- the run rate. Perhaps spin should have come on earlier. Jadeja only came in after the 26th over, and that's something the team management may need to rethink when conditions offer nothing for seam," he added.

Kamboj eventually found his mojo and robbed Duckett (94) of a century by forcing an outside edge which flew straight to wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel. Manjrekar felt the 24-year-old showed "potential" on a turf where he hardly got any help.

"I'm very happy for Kamboj -- there are clear signs that he has potential. He's got a simple, repeatable action, but he can't afford to bowl back of a length or good length at under 130 kph. That's an area for improvement. To be fair, the pitch also changed dramatically on Day 2, so he didn't get much help either," he concluded.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

A
Ananya R
Kamboj showed great character on debut despite the tough conditions. Getting Duckett's wicket was crucial. With proper grooming, he could be our next big pace hope after Bumrah retires. #FutureStar
S
Sarah B
As a cricket fan living in Manchester, I must say the weather changes here are brutal. But shouldn't a top team like India adapt better? England batted well in the same conditions later. Maybe our bowling tactics need rethinking.
V
Vikram M
Why are we always blaming external factors? Yes weather changed, but our batsmen threw away wickets to short balls. And our bowling has been toothless except Bumrah this whole series. Need to accept our shortcomings.
K
Kavya N
Kamboj's debut reminds me of Bumrah's early days - raw but promising! 💪 The way he came back after initial struggle shows mental strength. Hope selectors persist with him unlike many talents we lost due to short-term thinking.
M
Michael C
As an England supporter, I must say India's 358 is actually decent in those conditions. The real issue was bowling - Jadeja should have been introduced much earlier when it was clear pacers weren't effective. Strange captaincy from Gill.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50