This story is from November 23, 2012

England need to conquer fear of spin

The uncanny way in which England crumble when threatened with spin is a problem which they need to deal with if they are looking to win against India.
England need to conquer fear of spin
The uncanny way in which England crumble when threatened with spin is a problem which they need to deal with if they are looking to win against India.
MUMBAI: A lot of things have changed about English cricket in recent years. They don't always end up losing to Australia anymore; won an ICC trophy in 2009; became the World's No. 1 Test team for a brief period last year and their life doesn't revolve just around the Ashes like it used to.
In fact, captain Alastair Cook -- the choir boy turned prolific run-getter -- insists that the team's dressing room music isn't just Johnny Cash anymore either, but modern-day commercial.
Their tastes seem to have really changed.
What hasn't changed about English cricket though is the uncanny way in which they manage to bury themselves under extreme pressure when you threaten them with spin. Decades of having toured the Indian subcontinent has made no difference whatsoever. You give them a turning track -- or even talk about one, like MS Dhoni has -- and they give it away.
It showed in Ahmedabad and it looks likely that it'll show again in Mumbai. Dhoni's much discussed 'demand' that the curator at Wankhede better serve his team a track that turns from the first over may not necessarily see R Ashwin or Pragyan Ojha taking the new ball.
But even if Zaheer Khan does, England's mind may be on the first change. Mentally, India have a great advantage here as the second of the four-Test series begins on Friday.
From the dryness of the surface to the exact length of each blade of grass on the pitch, how soon it starts getting rougher and how much of an exact deviation do Ashwin or Ojha get will occupy England's mind more than anything else. To Dhoni's credit, he's given them this headache already.

In fact, it's not just a turning wicket that the Indian skipper has demanded. The track also needs to have bounce and the ball has to move quicker off the pitch. That's quite a handful indeed. Asked about his opinion of the Wankhede wicket, where India have played only one Test post the stadium renovation, Dhoni promptly declared: "If this pitch also does not help our spinners, then I will again come and criticise it."
Umesh Yadavout of Test; Stuart Broad taken ill
Dhoni asserted that India will play only two spinners here. The only replacement in the squad, in fact, will be Ishant Sharma or Ashok Dinda replacing pacer Umesh Yadav, who is down with a back injury. Similarly for England, paceman Stuart Broad has taken ill and did not practise on Thursday. Left-arm spinner Monty Panesar can come in for either Samit Patel or Broad. That could be the only change other than Jonny Bairstow replacing Ian Bell.
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