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Published on: Friday 29 August 2014 //

On the batting honours board hanging in the long room of the Trent Bridge pavilion, Murali Vijay’s is the second most recent name. The last time India were here at this idyllic, picture-perfect venue — for the Test series opener in July — the opener struck a magnificent 146, which prepared the ground for the eventual draw.


Vijay has long ceased to be a credible part of India’s one-day plans. He has a batting average of 19.46 in the format. However, long after he thought he was done with England, the Tamil Nadu right-hander learnt that his services were on standby again after Rohit Sharma, India’s opening bat in ODIs, fractured his bowling hand’s middle finger and was ruled out of the rest of the series.


Rohit, who made a crucial fifty in the last match at Cardiff, appeared to have hurt his finger while fielding at SWALEC Stadium on Wednesday. In the 35th over of the England innings, he dropped Chris Woakes when the latter played a full-blooded pull towards midwicket. He immediately rushed off the field.


India went on to win the match by a massive margin of 133 runs (D/L), and suddenly it seemed that everything was finally falling into place for the visitors. But with the BCCI confirming the extent of Rohit’s injury on Friday, India were out of their comfort zone almost as soon as they stepped in it.


Who then should open with Shikhar Dhawan, who himself is struggling rather badly? For it was unlikely that Vijay would make it in time for the third ODI — which meant India would have to make do with a makeshift opener. And if one of the middle-order batsmen was shoe-horned into the top slot, who would come in his place lower down? These questions were likely to have dominated the team meeting on match eve.


For Saturday’s match, it seemed likely that Ajinkya Rahane would open the innings with Dhawan. Rahane made his one day international debut as an opener three years ago in England. And he was one of the silver linings of that exceptionally gloomy series. However, after a string of poor scores, he was dropped from the team, and made his way back only as a middle-order batsman. But in Rohit Sharma’s absence in Bangladesh in June, Rahane again opened and struck a half century. At any rate, it’s a familiar position for Rahane, who is a regular opener for his IPL team, Rajasthan Royals.


Kohli for the job?


Another batsman who has opened in the ODIs in recent times is Virat Kohli. He came out to bat with Rohit in the fourth ODI against New Zealand earlier this year. However, the experiment flopped spectacularly — Kohli made only two — and was promptly abandoned. In January Kohli was in rich form when he was promoted; it’s unlikely that India would repeat it now that he is going through the worst patch of his career.]


Promoting Rahane, though, would leave a vacuum in the middle order. It will make for a strong case for Ambati Rayudu to come back into the XI after he was replaced by Suresh Raina in the last match. Raina, speaking in the pre-match press conference, didn’t give any reasonable hint as to who might open tomorrow. “Opening in England is always a difficult job. But we have a lot of youngsters and options to choose from. Sanju Samson is here and we also have Ambati Rayudu,” Raina said.


Whosoever comes in will have decent-sized boots to fill. Rohit might not have been the most consistently explosive opener around, but in the last one year he has been very consistent. He has made that position his own, averaging 43.20 in 39 innings, with two centuries (including a double) and 11 fifties. Elsewhere, he averages 31.72 in 79 innings. He is not a born opener, but he has made himself one. An effective one.


And it was evident in the last innings as well when his scrappy half-century, and Rahane’s under-the-radar 41, prepared the base for India’s big total.


But one man’s injury is another man’s opportunity. Rohit seized his chance when he was promoted up the order for the Champions Trophy in England. A year later in the same country, can his replacement do the same?


‘Court-siding’ spectator evicted from Sophia Gardens


Nottingham: More than a whodunit, it’s more of a what-did-he-actually-do. A spectator, with two laptops and a mobile phone, was evicted from the Sophia Gardens during the match on Wednesday. That much is certain. What is not established is ‘why’. A weekly, The Cricket Paper, has alleged that he was court-siding for bookies in India during the match.

‘Court siding’ can be explained as someone at a given venue relaying real-time information to bookies sitting elsewhere, taking advantage of the delay in the broadcast – which is a little more than a ball.

Now, while the England and Wales Cricket Board and Glamorgan (the hosts of the second match) admit that a spectator was evicted, they have refused to confirm that he was court-siding.

The paper has quoted Chris Watts, information officer of the ECB’s Anti-Corruption Unit, who confirmed a man was indeed thrown out of the Sophia Gardens by stewards for ‘breaching the ticket terms and conditions’.

However, when contacted on Friday afternoon, an ECB spokesperson denied that the said spectator was court-siding, rubbishing the story as ‘incorrect’. “The gentleman concerned was ejected from the ground by Glamorgan officials, but this ejection was not linked to court-siding or any activity in illegal bookmaking markets,” he was quoted as saying by the Press Trust of India.

In any case, it was — if indeed was — not the first instance of court-siding in England. The Cricket Paper’s report says that “in 2012, the ECB’s anti-corruption unit ejected 12 people from grounds across the country for such practices, with a further 9 thrown out last summer.”

Daksh Panwar


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