Dravid: India will review why batters are failing in third innings of Tests

India plays its last six games of the current WTC cycle in the sub-continent and Dravid plans to sit with chairman of selectors Chetan Sharma to analyse the shortcomings.

Published : Jul 05, 2022 20:30 IST

India, under Rahul Dravid's tutelage, has now lost its last three overseas Tests -- two in South Africa and one in England.
India, under Rahul Dravid's tutelage, has now lost its last three overseas Tests -- two in South Africa and one in England.
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India, under Rahul Dravid's tutelage, has now lost its last three overseas Tests -- two in South Africa and one in England.

India head coach Rahul Dravid on Tuesday said the repeated failures of his batters in the 'third' innings of a Test match is a matter of concern and they will sit with the national selectors to address the issue.

The Indian team, under Dravid's tutelage, has lost its last three overseas Test matches -- two in South Africa and one in Birmingham. It failed to defend a whopping 378-run target in the just-concluded game against England.

India scored 266 in its second innings in Johannesburg, 198 in Cape Town and 245 in Birmingham, which has been effectively in the third innings of a Test match.

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In all these three games, India failed to defend targets like 240, 212 and now 378.

Asked how he plans to analyse, the Indian coach gave a glimpse of his humorous side.

"There is so much of cricket that we aren't having any time to reflect. In two days, we will be talking to you about something entirely different," Dravid said, referring to the T20 International series starting in less than 48 hours.

"...But we will certainly try and reflect on this performance. Every match is a lesson for us and you tend to learn something. We have to reflect why we aren't able to bat well in the third innings of a Test match and why we aren't able to take 10 wickets in the fourth innings," he said on a serious note.

India plays its last six games of the current World Test Championship cycle in the sub-continent and Dravid plans to sit with Chetan Sharma (chairman of selectors currently in England) to analyse the shortcomings.

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"Now the next six Test matches are in sub-continent (two in Bangladesh and four in India), and our focus will be on those remaining games but obviously, coaches and selectors would sit down and analyse this defeat.

"That review happens after every game and so when we next travel to SENA (South Africa, England, New Zealand, Australia) land, we are well equipped to deal with it," he said.

'Numerous reasons for losing sustained intensity'

The current team has been losing steam during the third and fourth innings of a match and it could be because of a variety of factors, including bowlers' fitness over a passage of time.

"It is something that we need to look at and work on. We have been very good in last few years being able to take those wickets but yeah we haven't been able to do it over the last few months," said Dravid.

"Could be a variety of factors -- may be we need to maintain that intensity and may be we need to maintain that level of fitness, maintain that level of performance right through a Test match.

"Also in all these Test matches, the batting has also not been up to the scratch in the third innings as well. So both in SA [South Africa] and here, we have started well but haven't been able to finish well. Certainly, we need to get better at that and improve," he added.

'Conditions didn't warrant a second spinner'

Ravichandran Ashwin's absence has been debated but Dravid defended the team's strategy.

"It's not easy to leave someone like Ash[win] out in a Test match but when we looked at the wicket on first day, it had a pretty even covering of grass, and we felt that there was enough in it for the fast bowlers," Dravid explained.

"Also, if you see, wicket hasn't spun much either for Jack Leach or Ravi Jadeja, who bowled through the match. Weather also played a part as for the first three days, there weren't long phases of sunshine. Probably, it didn't spin as much as we expected it to. It actually would have looked nice to have a second spinner but it didn't turn enough to justify inclusion," he added.

'Don't know about 'Bazball' but England have been exceptional'

Dravid smiled when asked about 'Bazball', the popular lingo about Brendon McCullum's positive influence on England's Test batting over the past month.

"I don't know what it is. The cricket they played for four Tests, chasing like this in fourth innings doesn't happen often in this country but the brand of cricket you play depends on players and their form. You can play positive (cricket) when you have form players," Dravid said.

'No excuses that this is a one-off Test'

When the series was halted at 2-1 last year due to a COVID-19 outbreak in the Indian camp, Dravid was still the head of NCA (National Cricket Academy) and by the time it ended, he was the head coach of the national team.

Did a one-off Test become an impediment and were preparations hampered?

"Look, I don't want to make excuses. I wasn't a part of the team back then (in 2021). India was on a roll back then and England was probably in a slightly different situation when the series was on.

"They had now come here on back of three consecutive wins against NZ [New Zealand] and we have had a long gap in between Test cricket and that's why Test cricket is hard. So no excuses, you got to put in performances through five days and they did that and we didn't so they deserve to win the Test match," he concluded. 

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