Key Points

Sanjay Manjrekar has criticized India's team management for favoring bowling all-rounders over pure batters and spinners. He pointed out Ravindra Jadeja's batting success but bowling struggles, while Kuldeep Yadav remains sidelined. India trails England by 137 runs, with KL Rahul and Shubman Gill leading a fightback. The selection strategy could cost India the match and series.

Key Points: Sanjay Manjrekar Criticizes India's Poor Test Selections Against England

  • Manjrekar slams India's reliance on bowling all-rounders like Shardul Thakur
  • Jadeja excels with bat but struggles as a bowler
  • Kuldeep Yadav overlooked despite strong record
  • India trails England by 137 runs in 4th Test
4 min read

Manjrekar slams India's quite poor selections, urges management to dump inclination towards bowling all-rounders

Manjrekar urges India to drop bowling all-rounders after poor performances, highlights need for pure batters and spinners like Kuldeep Yadav.

"This inclination to have a bowler because he can bat a bit has to be dumped. – Sanjay Manjrekar"

Mumbai, July 27

Former Indian cricketer Sanjay Manjrekar slammed Team India management for poor selection choices during the ongoing Test series against England, pointing out that the team needs to "dump their inclination" of playing a bowler just because he can offer a little something with the bat.

Manjrekar was speaking on ESPNCricinfo. During the series, Team India has continued with its 'Bat Deep' approach, allowing for all-rounders like Ravindra Jadeja, Shardul Thakur/Nitish Kumar Reddy and Washington Sundar to play at the same time, instead of opting for one extra pure batter or spinner in Kuldeep Yadav.

The results have been mixed to say the least. While the mainstay Jadeja has offered 347 runs, including four fifties with the bat, he has done very little with the ball, taking seven wickets at an average of over 67. Sundar has been a solid selection though, taking seven wickets in three games at an average of over 35, including a four-wicket haul and scoring 104 runs in five innings, with a best score of 42. He has lessened the load of Jadeja, who has been contributing well with the bat.

But on the other hand, bowling all-rounder Shardul and Nitish have failed to do much. Though Shardul offered a vital 41 during the first innings here at Manchester, he failed at Leeds, falling for single digits in both innings. With the ball, he has only taken two wickets, averaging 72.00 and bowling just 27 overs across two matches. Nitish, on the other hand, a batting all-rounder, has taken three wickets at an average of 37.00, but just bowled 28 overs in two matches. With 45 runs in four innings, his batting has been disappointing.

Speaking on ESPNCricinfo, Manjrekar said that despite India's heroics with the bat, mainly by its core of Yashasvi Jaiswal, KL Rahul, Shubman Gill and Rishabh Pant, the selection choices have been "quite poor".

"We saw what Shardul Thakur was capable of in the first Test, and despite that, he was picked again. This inclination to have a bowler because he can bat a bit has to be dumped. India, in this particular Test match, needed a pure batter," he added.

Manjrekar said that while India is currently playing the catch-up game with England, trying to eat into the 311-run deficit and currently at 174/2 with Gill and Rahul out there, a pure batter and a pure wicket-taker would have made a lot of difference.

"Kuldeep Yadav not playing the whole series tells you the approach of this Indian team management. Jadeja has got the runs, almost saw India win. But as a bowler, he has not contributed, so that has hurt India. Washington Sundar got four wickets in the last game, so Kuldeep Yadav had to sit again," he added.

While Kuldeep played one match in England back in 2018 and went wicketless, he has a fine record against England, taking 21 wickets in six matches at an average of 22.28, with best figures of 5/72. He has not played any Test cricket since the first Test against New Zealand in October 2024. Since his Test debut in 2017, he has just played 13 Tests, taking 56 scalps at an average of 22.16 and four five-wicket hauls.

Earlier in the fourth Day of the Test match, India recovered after initial shocks in their second innings of the fourth Test, but the team is still in deep waters with England scoring a massive 669 in their first innings and getting an overall lead of 311 runs over the visitors, who had made 358 runs in the second innings.

Big centuries from Joe Root and skipper Stokes and some extra runs from tailenders proved to be a serious headache for India. The Indian second innings began on a shocking note with Yashasvi Jaiswal and Sai Sudharsan going back to the pavilion on a duck. KL Rahul and Captain Shubman Gill steadied India's innings with a patient and stellar stand of 174 runs.

India finished Day 4 on 174/2 and are now 137 runs behind England. If the Indian team can salvage the match on the fifth and final day on Sunday, it will be an achievement in itself. England went wicketless in the final session as Indian batters added 126 runs to their tally, with KL Rahul 87* and Shubman Gill 78* unbeaten on the crease.

India started the third session at 86/2 with Gill, who looked in fine touch, notched up his eighth Test fifty and fourth against England off 77 deliveries.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As a cricket fan living in India, I'm confused why we're not playing our best XI. The obsession with all-rounders is costing us matches abroad. Need proper batsmen in SENA countries!
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Ananya R
While I respect Manjrekar's views, let's not forget Washington Sundar has performed decently. The real issue is Shardul's selection - he's neither taking wickets nor scoring consistently. Team management needs to be more ruthless in selections.
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Vikram M
This 'bat deep' strategy might work at home but abroad we need wicket-takers! England showed how proper batsmen and bowlers win matches. 669 runs in first innings is embarrassing for our bowling attack 😡
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Kavya N
The selectors are too defensive! Always thinking about saving matches rather than winning them. Kuldeep's mystery spin could have troubled England batsmen. Hope Rahul and Gill can save this Test for us 🤞
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Michael C
Interesting perspective from Manjrekar. As an overseas fan, I've noticed India often makes these selection blunders in away Tests. The obsession with all-rounders reminds me of England's problems few years back. Specialists win matches!
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Priya S

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