Errors in shot selection let us down, says Kohli

Kohli said the margin of victory was not reflective of the actual win and that he was ready to focus on the team’s strengths and weaknesses.

November 07, 2015 07:06 pm | Updated November 29, 2021 01:13 pm IST - Mohali

As South Africa spinners wrecked havoc with the Indian batting line-up in their second innings of the first cricket Test here, captain Virat Kohli on Saturday said it was “errors in shot selection” rather than turn, which led to their collapse.

If Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja turned on the heat against the formidable South African batting, then visiting spinners Imran Tahir, Simon Harmer and Dean Elgar also proved effective on the I S Bindra wicket.

“Yes. I think that was the case. I can comment on our batting. We made errors rather than fear of spin. We made shot judgement errors. We know that it has been committed, it will be reflected upon and corrected, next time we come out to play,” Kohli, who won his first home game as captain, told reporters in Mohali.

Kohli also agreed that lack of domestic cricket could have led the players to lose touch with spin bowling.

“Could be. We have played a lot of cricket away from home and we have not played a lot of cricket on turning wickets. And as you rightly said, we haven’t played a lot of domestic cricket. That could be the case,” he said when asked about the players’ lack of ability to tackle spin.

“Obviously there could be a reason that, it is always said that Indians are very good players of spin, Asians are very good players of spin. That might pressurise a few guys saying that we have to play spin well. And if that doesn’t happen once or twice, it starts building up. It could be anything. The individuals need to be spoken to individually.

“At times we have played spin well. In the second innings is when we have not played spin well, as far as I have experienced. In the first innings we have played spin relatively well. I think it’s a mindset thing where some sort of fear creeps in and you’re not able to make the right decisions. Doesn’t matter if its spin or pace. More often than not, it has happened against spin. I think that is an area we can improve on,” he added.

Kohli spoke about Indian batsmen faltering against spin in the sub-continent.

“See we have played spin relatively badly in the past. Once it happened in Galle. I think the problem has been that we lost wickets too quickly. If we get a stand and then lose one, we’ve lost two three... so that needs to improve. Apart from that everyone plays spin well. It’s just a mindset thing.

“You can think of five different things while playing a stroke, thinking that the ball might go there. You need to think of only one thing. If you want to hit a ball somewhere, you need to think about only that. That sort of confidence is something only an individual can instill in himself.”

“We have spoken about that — having clarity of mind, playing fearless cricket. I think that’s what we are going to stress on again. Next time around the guys are going to back themselves more and face the situation front on rather than thinking what could have been done. Rather just be out there and be sure of what you want to do and have no fear in executing what you want to do,” said Kohli.

Indian spinners fashioned a comfortable 108-run victory after bundling out the visitors for 109 in the final session on Day 3 to take a 1-0 lead in the four-match series. Kohli said the margin of victory was not reflective of the actual win and that he was ready to focus on the team’s strengths and weaknesses.

“Yes, the match wasn’t as comfortable as the margin suggests. I wouldn’t say it was very very close. I would say if they had wickets in hand then it could have been interesting in the fourth innings. Apart from that I don’t really want to get into the deficiencies of the opposition team at the mistakes they made. I am sure they want to reflect on that and so do we as a batting unit.

“We have not performed to our potential in this game, the bowlers have stepped up. Even if the ball is turning how much the bowler needs to pitch the ball up to get the ball in the right areas. So they should get credit to that.

“Even the fast bowlers in both the innings, they bowled with good pace even in the last innings their spells were very important to make the batsmen feel they are not getting easy runs from any corner. So I think that was very very important as far as the whole bowling unit bowling together as well was concerned. I would prefer to look at our strengths and weaknesses,” he added.

Both Ashwin and Jadeja bagged a five-for in the first and second innings respectively and the spin troika, including Amit Mishra, bagged 19 wickets in the match. Kohli insisted that it was player skills and not pitch that played a role.

“Like Ashwin pointed out that he never saw any hype when we went on overseas tours. And it should not happen here as well. If you are an international cricketer then you have to use that ability and apply it if you see the dismissal, then you won’t find any dismissal where the ball has hit the batsman’s glove or witnessed a square turn. There were edges and it was the mistakes of the batsmen. The wicket did not have much of a role in that.”

Replying to a query on getting fast pitches for Indian pacers getting ready for foreign tour, Kohli said, “It all comes down to how many wickets the spinners get abroad. I don’t think we should compare the two things. Fast bowlers should be better but for that we don’t need to alter our home conditions.

“We can prepare such wickets and hold camps, get those kind of tracks in first-class cricket, but that can’t happen on a regular basis because when we talk of home conditions then in India we have a certain kind of pitches.

“The bounce and pace of SA and swing of England cannot be replicated here. Eventually it becomes a batting wicket which is not result oriented. If you want to play and compete in Tests then the wickets should be result oriented. When we played in Sri Lanka the first wicket and the second wicket was turning, third wicket was seaming but were all result oriented.

“So we don’t have a problem with that. If a fast track can be prepared somewhere fine, it will be our decision that we want that kind of wicket, whether our pacers want to bowl on that kind of wicket.”

‘Image conscious’ Jadeja relieved

All-rounder Ravindra Jadeja said he always feared being labelled as a player who excels only in domestic cricket and desperately wanted success at international level.

Jadeja made a good comeback to the Indian Test team as he scalped five wickets in South Africa’s second innings today and bagged the Man-of-the-Match award.

The left-hander was drafted into the Indian team after taking 38 wickets for Saurashtra with his spin bowling in four Ranji Trophy matches this season.

“I thought I have to do well for India too. I can’t relax, otherwise you get an image that you do well only in domestic cricket. That you don’t do well in international cricket. Personally I was worried about that more than anything, that you don’t want that label that you do well only in Ranji Trophy or domestic cricket. I wanted to do well in international cricket too,” Jadeja told reporters.

Talking about team’s strategy for the series-opener, Jadeja said they were clear what they needed to do.

“The game plan was to make spinning wickets because other team’s strength was pace bowling. That’s why we thought we would play spinners and play on turning tracks. When the wickets came in the first two-three matches, confidence followed by itself. There was a different confidence in me now.”

The bowler, who ended up with a match haul of 8-76, though said that the much-hyped I.S.Bindra pitch was not as bad as it was made out to be.

“The three Ranji Trophy matches that I played in Rajkot was even worse than this. This looks a very good wicket by comparison. Feels good as an Indian spinner to bowl in our own conditions. When the ball is turning and the wickets are coming, you get that confidence and then the ball comes out properly from your hand.

“It drops where you want it to drop. It’s good that way, I am getting wickets too, so I was just enjoying my bowling,” he said with a smile.

The 26-year-old though said he enjoyed the break he had after being left out of the team.

“I last played in the ODI series in Bangladesh. I was out of the team after that. There was a break of two-three months so I thought let me enjoy my horse riding. It was a good time. Just rode horses. When Ranji Trophy was about to begin, about one month before that I began practising and working out.”

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.