India vs Pakistan: At Birmingham, the onus is on India

Selection dilemma for Kohli; underdog status could liberate Pakistan

June 03, 2017 09:52 pm | Updated June 04, 2017 11:20 am IST - Birmingham

What pressure? While an India-Pakistan clash is always an high-stakes game, India captain Virat Kohli, left, and Shikhar Dhawan take their mind off cricket with some football on Saturday.

What pressure? While an India-Pakistan clash is always an high-stakes game, India captain Virat Kohli, left, and Shikhar Dhawan take their mind off cricket with some football on Saturday.

There is a reason India goes into Sunday’s Champions Trophy game at Edgbaston ranked third in the world and Pakistan eighth, having qualified for the competition by the skin of its teeth.

The last time Pakistan won a one-day series of note was in 2013, away to South Africa. In the years since, the team has only put together series wins against Zimbabwe, West Indies, Ireland and Sri Lanka, losing to Bangladesh, England, New Zealand, South Africa and Australia.

Earlier this year, the Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur said his side was still playing limited overs cricket that “belonged in the 20th century”. There is a sense that modern cricket has outdistanced Pakistan, a team still gloriously stuck in an age of unhurried run-accumulation, still happy to leave six hitting to one or two dashers, still fielding and running between the wickets like it’s 1993.

It’s easy to be fooled into thinking this is an incompetent unit though, and there has been much progress under Arthur.

“We’ve worked massively on strike rate,” he pointed out on Saturday. “We know we’re playing a different brand of cricket, in terms of awareness. Over the last 12 months, we’ve scored the third-most number of three-hundreds (6).”

This yawning gulf between the teams could, however, liberate Pakistan, the firm underdog here. It is India, instead, which has a reputation to live up to. In light of the build-up, this is a game, it seems, India simply cannot afford to lose.

Virat Kohli, player of the match in the last three meetings between the sides, has decisions to make about his eleven.

The top six is more or less settled and in his press conference on Saturday, Kohli appeared to suggest that Hardik Pandya would play.

The Baroda all-rounder’s bowling still needs work, but his ball-striking skills, in a side that needs finishers, make him greatly useful. Should Pandya feature, Kohli must choose four of Ravindra Jadeja, R. Ashwin, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Shami and Umesh Yadav. A strong case can be made for all of them; it cannot be an easy decision to make.

“That’s been on my mind the last five-six days,” Kohli said. “In both the games, all the guys have bowled beautifully and the attack looks really balanced. But Hardik has come into the equation as an all-rounder; you can only play four bowlers apart from him. We’ll have a look at the wicket and decide. There are all kinds of possibilities: two spinners, two fast bowlers; three fast bowlers and a spinner.”

Arthur announced Pakistan’s 12, stating that Junaid Khan, Haris Sohail and Fakhar Zaman would not feature. Wahab Riaz, Md. Amir, and Hasan Ali form a potent pace attack, with the teenaged leggie Shadab Khan and left-armer Imad Wasim spin-bowling options.

This is a green side, however, with only two players — Shoaib Malik and Md. Hafeez — with more than 100 caps. In contrast, India has six.

In days gone by, these matches were always a battle between India’s batsmen and Pakistan’s bowlers. Now, it seems India is simply the better side man for man. There is only one way to prove that any rifts in the camp have no bearing on performance: win on Sunday.

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