logo
Gautam Gambhir's self-inflicted chaos shreds Anshul Kamboj's confidence; Kuldeep Yadav's omission shows pig-headedness

Gautam Gambhir's self-inflicted chaos shreds Anshul Kamboj's confidence; Kuldeep Yadav's omission shows pig-headedness

When Anshul Kamboj arrived in Manchester early this week to link up with the Indian Test team, there was a sense of optimism. Hope, yes, but also the belief that he was the real deal. That he wouldn't become a one-Test blunder. That he had a long, promising future ahead of him. India's Anshul Kamboj bowls a delivery against England in Manchetser(PTI)
After all, the 24-year-old had stacked up an impressive CV of rave reviews. From Stephen Fleming, his coach at Chennai Super Kings. From R Ashwin, the now-retired off-spinner, India's second-highest wicket-taker in Tests. And most significantly, from Mahendra Singh Dhoni, the former India captain who isn't given to singing paeans of praise easily.
Kamboj is strong. He is young – only 24 – but he has a reasonable volume of work in first-class cricket. He is exciting, capable of bowling in the mid-130s, hitting the deck, coming on to the bat faster than it would appear at first sight. A great addition to the Test side, one thought, to back up Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj in the injury-enforced absences of Akash Deep and Arshdeep Singh.
There was little to suggest in the lead-up to the fourth Test that the lad from Haryana did not belong. In his two net sessions at Old Trafford, he ran in briskly, hurried India's best batters, seemed unaffected by his sudden elevation to a dressing-room that contained, among others, the world's best bowler. When he received his Test cap from Deep Dasgupta, the India stumper turned commentator, on Wednesday morning, one couldn't help but marvel at his journey from Karnal to Manchester.
It didn't take long for the bubble to burst. After India had wended their way to 358 on being put in – Kamboj was out for a duck, perhaps a portent of things to come – he was given the new ball alongside Bumrah, ahead of Siraj. Hmmm, here we go…
The first ball, to the aggressive Ben Duckett, was a gentle, friendly 76 mph offering. Eyebrows were raised in the press box, questioning looks exchanged. 'Nerves', we told each other. 'Let him settle down.' As if to buttress the point, he produced a nasty next ball that climbed wickedly, pinged the left-handed Duckett on his glove and flew just wide of stand-in keeper Dhruv Jurel, down to fine-leg for four. Who knows what might have happened had it stuck, had Jurel pulled off a screamer.
We do know what actually happened, don't we? After his first three days in Test cricket, Kamboj has figures of 18-1-89-1, his lone wicket a gift from Duckett, who feathered a short, wide, innocuous delivery to Jurel six short of his hundred. If it was possible, Kamboj's pace on day three dropped even further – from 128-plus on Thursday to barely above 125. It did little to enhance India's hard-earned recent reputation as the land of promising quicks, a reputation now in tatters with numerous quicks picking up non-cricketing injuries.
'I wish I could give you that answer (about Kamboj's lack of pace), because I would have told him then how to bowl quicker,' Morne Morkel, the former South African pacer who is one of India's assistant coaches, acknowledged with a rueful smile. 'He arrived here, he bowled well in the nets, and we went with that. Why were the speeds so low? That is something we're working on. But he was definitely quicker when we saw him in the India 'A' games (in England in May-June) and in some of the games back home.'
India aren't in trouble in the fourth Test merely because of Kamboj – Bumrah and Siraj tasted their first successes in their 24th and 25th overs respectively and offie Washington Sundar, despite four second-innings wickets at Lord's, wasn't pressed into service till the 69th over. Head coach Gautam Gambhir, his support group and captain Shubman Gill must offer more convincing explanations surrounding the repeated omission of Kuldeep Yadav. The left-arm wrist-spinner is a novelty in Test cricket and England don't play wrist-spin well. The Old Trafford pitch is quite dry, all the more reason for Kuldeep to play, but in their desire to bolster batting depth, India have chosen to omit their second most potent bowling weapon. Maybe they will field him at The Oval next week. Maybe by then, the horse would have bolted to another continent.
Being too clever by half is a real thing. India have been that, and more. Many of their left-field calls have worked, such as playing both Nitish Kumar Reddy and Washington in Birmingham. Others haven't, among them pushing Karun Nair up to No. 3 in the second and third Tests. No prizes for guessing in which category Kamboj's inclusion, ahead of Prasidh Krishna, falls. Or, for that matter, the pig-headedness when it comes to Kuldeep. A potential third straight series loss is pretty much of India's own making – on the field, yes, but emphatically off it too.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ENG vs IND fifth Test: Rishabh Pant ruled out of fifth Test due to injury; N. Jagadeesan named replacement
ENG vs IND fifth Test: Rishabh Pant ruled out of fifth Test due to injury; N. Jagadeesan named replacement

The Hindu

time18 minutes ago

  • The Hindu

ENG vs IND fifth Test: Rishabh Pant ruled out of fifth Test due to injury; N. Jagadeesan named replacement

India wicketkeeper-batter Rishabh Pant was on Sunday (July 27, 2025) ruled out of the fifth and final Test against England after sustaining a fracture to his right foot on day one of the fourth match here. Tamil Nadu's N. Jagadeesan has been named as his replacement. "Rishabh Pant, who sustained a fracture to his right foot during the fourth Test against England in Manchester, has been ruled out of the fifth and final Test of the series," the BCCI said in a press release. The 27-year-old Pant retired hurt on 37 on the opening day of the Test in Manchester and went for scans after taking a blow to his right foot while attempting a reverse sweep off England pacer Chris Woakes. He, however, returned to bat after the fall of Shardul Thakur's wicket with India at 314/6 and went on to score an audacious fifty. "The BCCI Medical Team will continue to monitor his progress and the team wishes him a speedy recovery," BCCI secretary Devajit Saikia said in the release. "The Men's Selection Committee has named Narayan Jagadeesan as replacement for Rishabh Pant for the fifth Test, which begins on July 31, 2025, at Kennington Oval, London." India's updated squad for the fifth Test: Shubman Gill (C), Yashasvi Jaiswal, KL Rahul, Sai Sudharsan, Abhimanyu Easwaran, Karun Nair, Ravindra Jadeja, Dhruv Jurel (WK), Washington Sundar, Shardul Thakur, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohd. Siraj, Prasidh Krishna, Akash Deep, Kuldeep Yadav, Anshul Kamboj, Arshdeep Singh, N Jagadeesan (WK).

Generations will talk about what Pant did for this team: Gautam Gambhir
Generations will talk about what Pant did for this team: Gautam Gambhir

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Generations will talk about what Pant did for this team: Gautam Gambhir

Manchester, Head coach Gautam Gambhir on Sunday said the character and foundation of the current Indian team will be built on the remarkable act of courage from Rishabh Pant, who batted in the first innings of the fourth Test with a broken right foot. HT Image Pant added crucial first innings runs for the team despite batting with a fractured foot after missing a reverse sweep off Chris Woakes on day one. He managed to get a half-century, helping India post 358 on day two. Pant was not required to bat in the second innings as Ravindra Jadeja and Washington Sundar guided India to a morale-boosting draw with a century each to keep the series alive. "Rishabh already, it's been declared that he's out of the series. And one thing I want to say is that the character and the foundation of this team will be built on what Rishabh did for the team and for the country as well," said Gambhir in the post-match media interaction. "Any amount of praise is not enough for him, especially batting with a broken foot. Not many people have done that in the past. And he had put his hand up, and that is why I say any amount of praise... "I can sit here and talk about this for hours and hours. I think the generations to come forward will talk about this. And generations coming forward should talk about it, that there is someone who has batted with a broken foot. And it's unfortunate because of the kind of form he was in. "But again, he's an important member of the Test side. And I hope he recovers quickly and comes back quickly and try and deliver a game for us," said the former India batter. All fast bowlers are fit for final Test, no call taken on Bumrah yet ========================================== Gambhir also gave an important update on the fitness of the fast bowlers who have had to deal with heavy workload and injuries over the course of the five-match series. Having mentioned earlier that Jasprit Bumrah would be playing only three Tests due to workload management, Gambhir said no call is taken yet on his participation at The Oval. For the record, the Manchester Test was Bumrah's third of the tour but with the series still on the line, he might just play in London. "All the fast bowlers are there. There is no injury scare," Gambhir asserted. That means that Akash Deep has fully recovered from his groin injury and Arshdeep Singh from his hand injury. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

She once borrowed shoes. Now she's donating spikes
She once borrowed shoes. Now she's donating spikes

Time of India

time2 hours ago

  • Time of India

She once borrowed shoes. Now she's donating spikes

BHOPAL: She's the youngest of six siblings. A class 8 dropout. A daughter of a dismissed policeman. A bowler with six English wickets and a nation watching. Cricketer Kranti Goud once bowled in hand-me-down shoes. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Today, the 21-year-old Indian women's team star wants to equip budding girl cricketers with premium spiked shoes - free of cost. Her drive? To ensure no girl with talent is benched by poverty. Goud from Ghuwara, a tribal-majority village in MP's Chhatarpur district, has secured a sponsorship deal with an international shoe brand - her first personal milestone off the pitch. On it, she's already made headlines: a searing 6/52 against England, her first five-wicket haul in ODIs, helped India seal the recent series in the third match. Goud's rise from rural Bundelkhand to the national spotlight is a tale stitched with adversity. Her father Munna Singh, a former MP police constable, was dismissed in 2012 during election duty. The family had to vacate their official quarters and shift to a rented home. Eldest brother Mayank dropped out of school to work. "We were in a lot of trouble," he said. "There were days we didn't have proper meals. People mocked us for letting Kranti pursue cricket, but somehow we held on." Coach Rajiv Bilthare took her in at his Sai Cricket Academy in Chhatarpur in 2017. "She came in worn-out clothes and regular shoes," he said. "Her father was jobless. Her family had nothing. I didn't charge her any fees. I gave her shoes, uniform, and even bought her gear." One memory stands out. "I gave her Rs 1,600 to buy cricket spikes. She lit up. Said it felt like a dream," Bilthare said. That dream carried Goud to the national squad. She now wants to help others walk the path - one pair of spiked shoes at a time. "It's time for me to give back to society," she said. "I want to buy a house for my family. That's first. But I also want girls at our academy to play without worrying about money. My assistance will help them focus on the game." The right-arm medium-fast bowler made her ODI debut against Sri Lanka on May 11 and her T20 international debut against England on July 12. She represents MP in domestic cricket and plays for UP Warriorz in Women's Premier League (WPL).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store