Thursday, February 02, 2006

Master planner that is Woolmer

The last time when India was in Pakistan, they made history by defeating the hosts 2-1 in the three match series. Then, their coach was Miandad. The team lacked discipline and control. The raw talents had no focus. Mohd Yousof was a Christian (Youhana). Ofcourse, the last statement has nothing to do with the rest.

This time around it was different. Pakistan, under Woolmer is a more disciplined and confident team, especially with a series of good performances against England.

There must have been a lot of planning happening in Pakistan, even before the Indians landed in Pak. Their strategy seems to have been well thought out by that time.

Woolmer wanted to prevent back-to-back embarassment for Pak at all cost. He did not want Pak. to lose the series in trying to win it. So he ensured that Pak would not lose in the first two tests by ordering for dead pitches where even his bowlers cannot pick twenty wickets leave alone India's. Remember the hype of preparing fast tracks to test the Indian batting line-up before they came up with feather beds? All that mind war, India did well not to fall for.

Everyone thought India came out well in the first two encouters by meeting aggressive batting with solid responses. But Woolmer had different plans. He had already set the Indians up for the ultimate encounter with orders for a green strip in Karachi.

To an extent, even he would agree, that his plans backfired on him when India, surprisingly, won the toss and when, of all people, Irfan Pathan started off with a hat-trick. At 39-6 he would have cursed himself for not being more aggressive right from the beginning of the series. However, he must have been happy to see the final score of 245 on the board and India reeling at 74-4 by the end of the first day. His plan had already worked.

Whereas, his Indian (shouldI say Australian) counterpart, Greg Chappell, overwhelmed by the record breaking performance of his makeshift opener captain on dead tracks (I still love Dravid), had no game plan whatsoever. Oh! wait, actually he did have the surprise element of sending Laxman in as the opener at Sehwag's expense. I thought Gambhir and Jaffer were in reserve just to fulfill that requirement. Didn't the Chappell/Dravid duo assess the pitch beforehand? Then why would Dravid choose to bowl when he won the toss, if they didn't after two high scoring draws? The answer is "Over confidence". Woolmer won there.

Gavaskar has a valid point.

Ordinary stuff, I tell you... Disappointingly pedestrial.

PS:- A great player does not necessarily, a good captain maketh. A great player does not necessarily, a good coach maketh.