Ashwin and Jadeja prove their worth to the team
as all-rounders
A small switch in the batting order made a big
difference for India at the Eden Park on a night of swirling emotions.
R. Ashwin was promoted to the No. 7 spot and
Ravindra Jadeja came in at No. 8, a slot that his spin partner previously
occupied.
The move made sense. Ashwin began his career as
an opener and has the skills of a frontline batsman. He judges the length early,
has time to play and place the ball into the gaps.
And his smart cricketing mind harnesses the
angles on the field. When he is at the crease, one does get the impression that
Ashwin is constantly attempting to outsmart the bowler.
Walking in with the Indian score at 146 for five
in the 28th over also allowed Ashwin more space to play himself in and control
the innings.
Natural
striker
Jadeja is a natural striker of the ball. He
generates power and clears the field. The left-hander also has the instincts of
a finisher.
In the past, India has been overly dependent on
Mahendra Singh Dhoni for closing out games. Following his blitz in the final
moments of the tied humdinger on Saturday, Jadeja could shoulder some of that
responsibility.
Such an innings under pressure can lift
confidence levels several notches. Confidence and belief are intertwined.
Finally, India displayed some batting depth in
this series — such a crucial element of any ODI outfit. For this, the
all-rounders need to fire.
The fact that Ashwin and Jadeja are a right-left
combination also made things harder for the bowlers as they constantly had to
shift their line. Their methods forced the Kiwi bowlers to alter the length as
well. Ashwin uses the pace of the ball while Jadeja is more of a heavy hitter.
Importantly, Ashwin and Jadeja pulled their
weights as bowlers in the third ODI.
The surface did not suit their type of bowling
but the duo pegged the run-rate back with some accurate stuff.
Although he scalped the left-handed Corey Anderson
with a quicker one from round the wicket, it was good to see Ashwin bowling a
tidy off-stump line from over the wicket to the right-handers.
Ashwin fell to a stirring catch at deep
mid-wicket by Martin Guptill. How did Guptill pull off that delicate balancing
act precariously close to the ropes when he has only two toes in a foot?
This is a story within a story. Guptill call
himself ‘Two Toes.’ With three toes lost in an accident when young, he still is
a livewire on the field, and his distribution of weight as a batsman is just
right.
Defying
the odds
How does he manage this? Only Guptill will know.
Yet, surely, his has been a journey of pain, sacrifice and fulfilment.
The tale of this 27-year-old from Auckland
showcases that precious ability to overcome obstacles, both physical and
mental.
This New Zealand team is not short of protagonists
who have defied the odds.
Hamish Bennett’s career was as good as over when
a serious back injury kept him out of cricket for three years.
The gangling paceman with a rather open-chested
and round-armish action went under the knife. He now has screws and titanium
wires supporting his back.
Bennett fought his way back in domestic cricket.
When fast bowler Adam Milne was ruled out after the first ODI against India,
Bennett was drafted in.
Pick
of the bowlers
The 26-year-old Bennett bowled at a lively pace
in Auckland, extracted bounce, prised out Virat Kohli with slight away
deviation, and was the pick of the Kiwi bowlers. In his comeback, lies a
triumph.
Then there is the rocky path of the talented
Jesse Ryder; alcoholism following a troubled childhood, suspension for
consumption of a banned substance and hospitalisation in serious condition
after a violent assault outside a Christchurch pub.
After all this, Ryder is still around. And trying
to be a better person and a cricketer.
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