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Plan to take off-side out of Australians was hatched in July: India bowling coach

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New Delhi, Jan 22: Australian batsmen fell nicely into the leg-side trap set by the Indian bowlers during the fiercely-contested series that ended earlier this week but its planning, spearheaded by head coach Ravi Shastri, started way back in July, bowling coach Bharat Arun revealed on Friday.
Not just the pacers, even the spinners attacked the stumps of Australia’s batting pillars, Steve Smith and Marnus Labuschagne, with fielders at catching positions on the leg side. India won the series 2-1 after pulling off a stunning chase on day five in the fourth and final Test at the Gabba. Speaking to media in an online press conference, Arun said the ploy to strangle the Australians was Shastri’s brainchild. “Ravi called me sometime in July and we were discussing the Australia tour, that we needed to take the off side out of the Australians. So, we had our own analysis and we felt most of the runs Smith and Labuschagne scored and most of Ausssie batsmen, they had got lot of runs out of the cut, pull and on the off side,” the 58-year-old said. Arun said they also learnt from how the New Zealand bowlers, especially Neil Wagner, troubled Smith during the series between the trans-tasmanian rivals in the previous season.
“We took a cue out of the NZ attack. When they bowled to Steve Smith, they had bowled bodyline to him and he felt very uncomfortable. “So, Ravi called up and said ‘I want you to make a plan where you eliminate the off side out of the Australians’. “He said we will attack straighter lines and have an on side field so it is very difficult for batsmen to be consistently clearing the onside fields. That really worked for us.”
Arun said the plan was subsequently communicated to skipper Virat Kohli. “The thought process started sometime in July then we had discussions with Virat. “He bought into the theory and we employed the same strategy in Adelaide and Ajinkya was magnificent from Melbourne onwards. The bowlers responded beautifully to that,” said the bowling coach. The likes of Shardul Thakur, Washington Sundar and T Natarajan were made to stay back post the limited overs leg of the tour and with India hit by a barrage of injuries during the Test series, all three ended up playing the Brisbane Test and did rather well. “…I think it was a great move by Ravi Shastri to hold back all the bowlers who had come in as net bowlers,” said Arun. “After the ODI series most of them were supposed to go back but somehow, we thought in case anything happens to a player then it would be impossible for anyone to come because of the (quarantine) restrictions. “So, we said we will manage with everyone here and because they were with us for a period of time, they were able to understand what it demands to be successful in Australia and work on those lines. So, them being with us helped a great deal.”
And the support staff made sure even the net bowlers like Sundar got to bat in the nets. As it turned out, he and Thakur’s 123-run stand for the seventh wicket in the first innings allowed India to fight back in the game.
“Washington, though he was a net bowler, used to bat every day for half an hour. We needed to spend extra hours in the net but we needed to give each and everyone the attention. In the end it paid off,” said Arun. Barring the day-night Test at Adelaide, India played five specialist bowlers, which has been the norm overseas under Virat Kohli’s captaincy. “…On most occasions, we play five bowlers abroad because to bowl out a team in conditions abroad demands a lot out of just four bowlers. It’s a huge task.” The thoughts of playing an extra batsman did creep in after the Adelaide debacle but the team stuck to its beliefs, said Arun. “The guiding principle of this team is to be fearless and honest. We don’t fear losing games. They teach us a lot of lessons.
“In the last Test there were discussions about playing an extra batsman but we felt that it would have been a negative move and all of us felt the five-bowler theory has worked for us. We knew Washington Sundar is more than a capable bat,’ said Arun. The injuries were a setback but at the same time, they did expose India’s solid bench strength in the bowling department. Whoever was given an opportunity rose to the occasion.
“If you want India to be doing well sustainably, you need a pool of bowlers who will be rotated time and again so that they stay fresh. Now we are blessed with a great bench strength…” (PTI)

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