logo
Hayden, Smith feel Indias inexperience could hurt them in England

Hayden, Smith feel Indias inexperience could hurt them in England

Mint5 hours ago

Leeds, Jun 20 (PTI) India have "lost a lot of experience" with the recent retirements of stalwarts Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma and are going to struggle in the seaming conditions of England, reckoned cricket legends Matthew Hayden and Graeme Smith.
India will be led by Shubman Gill in the five-match Test series, which is starting at Headingley from Friday, and the touring party's batting line-up will be thin on experience with both Kohli and Rohit announcing their retirements from the format last month.
"I feel India are really going to struggle. Shubman Gill is a young captain coming to this hostile environment, seaming conditions, bouncing conditions. It's going to be a real challenge, it's actually absolutely the litmus test as a touring team," Hayden told the ICC.
"Generally touring teams come here and it is polar opposite conditions to what you are used to as fundamentally as a player, be it young or old. So lots of adjustments, so I predict that England, let me tell you, are a going to have a pretty good party at the end of that series," the former Australia opener said.
Weighing with his prediction for the blockbuster series, former South Africa captain Smith feels the peerless Jasprit Bumrah will be overburdened in conditions too familiar to England.
"England at home, they really do play well at home. They understand the conditions and get the best out of it. I think it's going to be a challenge for Shubman and his team, lost a lot of experience, got to come here and that pressure shifts onto different people..." Smith said.
"I think Bumrah is going to carry a huge amount of the bowling attack. So I think England will have the better of India in these conditions," he added.
Besides Kohli and Rohit, there will also be no R Aswhin, who called it quits after the third Test of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in Brisbane last December.
The last time India won a Test series in England was in 2007, only the third instance (1971 and 1986 being the other two) when the visitors emerged victorious in that part of the world since the start of bilateral engagements in 1932.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Indian junior archers enter three finals at Asia Cup Stage 2
Indian junior archers enter three finals at Asia Cup Stage 2

The Print

time21 minutes ago

  • The Print

Indian junior archers enter three finals at Asia Cup Stage 2

The trio of Vishnu Choudhary, Paras Hooda and Juyel Sarkar dominated from the outset, taking the opening set 55-48. The Indian men's recurve team, seeded second, defeated fifth-seeded Bangladesh 5-1 in a one-sided semifinal to set up a summit clash with third seeds Japan. Singapore, Jun 19 (PTI) Indian junior archers continued their dominating run by storming into three team finals at the Asia Cup Stage 2 here on Thursday. Although the second set was tied at 55-55, the Indians bounced back strongly, dropping just one point in the third set to win it 59-56 and seal the issue. India also assured themselves of a medal in the compound men's team event after the trio of Kushal Dalal, Ganesh Thirumuru and Mihir Apar edged past fifth-seeded Australia in a tense semifinal decided by a shoot-off (30-29) after both teams were tied at 232 after four sets. India will take on Kazakhstan in the final. The top-seeded Indian compound women's team comprising Shanmukhi Budde, Tejal Salve and Tanishka Thokal defeated fourth-seeded Kazakhstan 230-229 in a nail-biting semifinal to ensure another medal. They will meet Malaysia in the final. However, there was heartbreak for the Indian women's recurve team. Seeded fifth, the troika of Vaishnavi Pawar, Kirti, and Tamanna lost a thrilling quarterfinal to fourth seeds Japan 4-5 (26-28) in the shoot-off after a five-set battle. They lost the opening set 47-49 and slumped further after managing only 34 in the second set to Japan's 55. But the Indians showed great resilience to take the third set 55-53 and level the scores 4-4 after claiming the fourth set 54-52. In the shoot-off, Japan edged ahead by just two points. Indian archers are also in the hunt for four individual medals on the concluding day on Friday. The women's compound final will be an all-Indian affair, with Shanmukhi set to face Tejal for gold. In the men's compound section, India will be in the hunt in both the gold and bronze medal matches. Kushal will face Joshua Mahon of Australia for the gold, while Sachin Chechi will take on Himu Bachhar of Bangladesh for bronze. PTI TAP APA APA This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.

Sanjay Manjrekar's veiled dig at Virat Kohli after Rahul, Jaiswal dominate: 'A former batter would've gotten in trouble'
Sanjay Manjrekar's veiled dig at Virat Kohli after Rahul, Jaiswal dominate: 'A former batter would've gotten in trouble'

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

Sanjay Manjrekar's veiled dig at Virat Kohli after Rahul, Jaiswal dominate: 'A former batter would've gotten in trouble'

A Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ravichandran Ashwin-minus India began well in the ongoing five-match series against England after being asked to bat first by Ben Stokes in the first Test at Headingley, Leeds. India's opening batters KL Rahul and Yashasvi Jaiswal mixed caution with aggression to put England's pace attack of Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse, Jos Tongue and Stokes under pressure. Former India batter Sanjay Manjrekar praised Rahul and Jaiswal for their ability to not poke at balls bowled outside the off-stump. However, in doing so, he ended up taking a jibe at former India captain Virat Kohli, who retired from Test cricket in May 2025, just days ahead of the squad announcement for the England series. Speaking about Kohli, the right-handed batter got dismissed on all eight occasions against Australia in a similar fashion as he kept chasing deliveries on the fourth and fifth stump lines. This weakness has really troubled Kohli for his entire career, and in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy, the likes of Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, and Scott Boland really exploited it to the tilt. Speaking of the Headingley Test, Rahul and Jaiswal showed no signs of nerves as the duo exhibited a clear game plan against the England pace attack. Rahul and Jaiswal saw off the new ball within the first hour. However, the duo were quick to pounce on loose deliveries. Also Read: KL Rahul's 'unfair treatment' triggers debate; 'Come on, it's been a decade'; Manjrekar disagrees; 'Nobody would dare…' "Deliveries outside the off stump, full, have been left alone. Jaiswal has done that. Anything that has been pitched right up into the stumps, he has driven. Anything that has been wide, he has looked to score on. KL Rahul has not touched one delivery or attempted to play one single delivery that's been full, just outside off. Anything that has been wide, he has gone with a covered drive," said Manjrekar while commentating in the first session on Day 1 of the first Test. "So a lot of what you're seeing is being created by these two batters, and my hat's off to them. We know of a former batter who would have gone after that delivery and got himself into trouble. But not these two," he added. It must be mentioned that Rahul's dismissal eventually came when he chased a delivery bowled well outside off. The right-hander went for a big booming drive and ended up losing his wicket to Brydon Carse for 42. India have handed a debut to Sai Sudharsan in the first Test. The left-hander would be batting at No.3. Karun Nair has also returned to the Test playing XI after eight years. He would be batting at No.6. Sanjay Manjrekar said that this might be a young batting line-up, but all of the members chosen in the playing XI have good technique, which would help the team. 'That's why I believe this is a young batting line-up. But when you look at their batting technique, they have the technique to survive in challenging test conditions. Sai Sudarshan as well. T20 Sensation will come and defend well. Down the order, Rishabh Pant has a good defence,' said Manjrekar. 'Jadeja as well. Karun Nair, I'm not sure how he'll go. But these two have shown that, for openers, they're just ideal with their defensive technique,' he added. Earlier, England captain Ben Stokes won the toss and asked India to bat first. The hosts are playing with a lone spinner, Shoaib Bashir.

Nasser Hussain picks Virat Kohli moment that has stuck with him most
Nasser Hussain picks Virat Kohli moment that has stuck with him most

Mint

timean hour ago

  • Mint

Nasser Hussain picks Virat Kohli moment that has stuck with him most

Leeds [UK], June 20 (ANI): Former captain Nasser Hussain handpicked Virat Kohli's speech that he gave to his players in a hurdle during the final day at Lord's as the moment between India and England Test rivalry that has stuck with him. The moment that Hussain is referring to is India's tour of England in 2021. It was the final day of the second Test at the 'Home of Cricket', Lord's, and England was in pursuit of a 272-run target with 60 overs left. During the hurdle, Virat delivered a passionate speech, and his famous words still live rent-free in the hearts of cricket fans: "For 60 overs, they should feel hell." India pacers Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami, Mohammed Siraj, and Ishant Sharma breathed fire and left England batters bamboozled to wrap up the game in the final hour of the Test with a 151-run triumph. "I was asked about my favourite India-England moment, historically. There have been so many. It may have not been my favourite, but it is the one that stuck with me the most. In the hurdle that last morning at Lord's when England were trying to chase the score, he was in the hurdle pointing at every Indian player telling them to unleash hell on that England batting lineup for 60 overs," Hussain said on Sky Sports. "That is what his side did. That side became the mirror image of Virat's character. Test match cricket is so much better when Kohli was playing. We will move on. We moved from Gavaskar to Tendulkar to Kohli and maybe to Gill. But Kohli added so much to this game," he added. Virat penned a heartfelt note on social media and pulled the curtain down on his 14-year-long Test career last month. As a result, he missed India's ongoing tour of England. After his decision, he returned to on-field action for Royal Challengers Bengaluru in the 18th season of the Indian Premier League (IPL). He steered Bengaluru to their maiden IPL title, and after the famous triumph, he emphasised the importance of the Test format and said, "So I would just urge the youngsters coming through to treat that format with respect. Because if you perform in Test cricket, you walk around anywhere in the world, people look you in the eye and shake your hand and say, well done, you played the game really well. So if you want to earn respect in World cricket all over, take up Test cricket, give your heart and soul to it." Nasser reflected on Virat's statement and said, "I mean, it was great to see what he said when he won the IPL about Test cricket. What he told the next generation that is the way you make your name in Test match cricket." (ANI)

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