TimesofIndia.com in Mullanpur: The challenge before KL Rahul and Sai Sudharsan was not Afghanistan's bowling attack. It was the transition from two months of relentless T20 cricket back to the demands of Test cricket. One had to rediscover patience after a prolific IPL campaign, while the other had to justify the faith placed in him by the team management. By stumps on Day 1, both had passed their respective tests. Rahul ground his way to a hard-fought century, and Sai produced a fluent 81 as India took control of the one-off Test.
For three straight days in the lead-up, KL Rahul spent hours at the nets under the sweltering sun. Even a day before the Test, when training was optional, only three batters turned up: KL Rahul was one of them. Throughout those sessions, one thing stood out: Rahul was trying to play closer to his body and shed the habits of T20 batting. However, unlike most of his teammates, the turnaround was not as abrupt for 34-year-old. Delhi Capitals played their last league game on May 17, more than two weeks before India's Test squad ******* embled in Chandigarh.
But red-ball cricket brings its own challenges, especially after two months of non-stop T20 cricket.
At the start of his innings, Rahul looked rusty. Credit to Afghanistan's new-ball bowlers, Ziaur Rahman Sharifi and Azmatullah Omarzai, who made the most of whatever little there was to extract from the surface. The duo bowled a disciplined length and asked probing questions of both Yashasvi Jaiswal and Rahul.
Jaiswal was put down by Abdul Malik at gully when the left-hander was on 11 off Omarzai's bowling. However, he failed to make the most of the reprieve before Saleem Safi strangled him down the leg side.
Rahul struggled for timing through most of the opening session but managed to survive. His frustration was visible as he searched for rhythm. The muscle memory of attacking cricket briefly took over and, in an attempt to break the shackles, he tried a back-foot cut off Ziaur Rahman. There was a definite nick. Rahmanullah Gurbaz, standing at second slip, was convinced, but failed to persuade captain Hashmatullah Shahidi, who decided against taking the DRS.
Barring that gift, Rahul looked solid. Afghanistan's bowlers kept probing and their spinners extracted some bounce as well. Once the early moisture disappeared, Rahul looked increasingly comfortable against spin. Soon after the lunch break, he completed his half-century following an 86-ball grind.
Rahul found an able partner in Sai Sudharsan at the other end. The pair added 139 runs for the second wicket.
If Rahul looked rusty, Sudharsan, who was preferred ahead of Devdutt Padikkal, made the most of his opportunity with a polished 81. On the eve of the Test, Gautam Gambhir had said that Sai would get a "longer rope" and that the management had complete faith in him to succeed at No. 3.
Sai got off to a brisk start with a couple of crisp flicks but was dropped twice, on 18 and 59.
Lef
For three straight days in the lead-up, KL Rahul spent hours at the nets under the sweltering sun. Even a day before the Test, when training was optional, only three batters turned up: KL Rahul was one of them. Throughout those sessions, one thing stood out: Rahul was trying to play closer to his body and shed the habits of T20 batting. However, unlike most of his teammates, the turnaround was not as abrupt for 34-year-old. Delhi Capitals played their last league game on May 17, more than two weeks before India's Test squad ******* embled in Chandigarh.
But red-ball cricket brings its own challenges, especially after two months of non-stop T20 cricket.
At the start of his innings, Rahul looked rusty. Credit to Afghanistan's new-ball bowlers, Ziaur Rahman Sharifi and Azmatullah Omarzai, who made the most of whatever little there was to extract from the surface. The duo bowled a disciplined length and asked probing questions of both Yashasvi Jaiswal and Rahul.
Jaiswal was put down by Abdul Malik at gully when the left-hander was on 11 off Omarzai's bowling. However, he failed to make the most of the reprieve before Saleem Safi strangled him down the leg side.
Rahul struggled for timing through most of the opening session but managed to survive. His frustration was visible as he searched for rhythm. The muscle memory of attacking cricket briefly took over and, in an attempt to break the shackles, he tried a back-foot cut off Ziaur Rahman. There was a definite nick. Rahmanullah Gurbaz, standing at second slip, was convinced, but failed to persuade captain Hashmatullah Shahidi, who decided against taking the DRS.
Barring that gift, Rahul looked solid. Afghanistan's bowlers kept probing and their spinners extracted some bounce as well. Once the early moisture disappeared, Rahul looked increasingly comfortable against spin. Soon after the lunch break, he completed his half-century following an 86-ball grind.
Rahul found an able partner in Sai Sudharsan at the other end. The pair added 139 runs for the second wicket.
If Rahul looked rusty, Sudharsan, who was preferred ahead of Devdutt Padikkal, made the most of his opportunity with a polished 81. On the eve of the Test, Gautam Gambhir had said that Sai would get a "longer rope" and that the management had complete faith in him to succeed at No. 3.
Sai got off to a brisk start with a couple of crisp flicks but was dropped twice, on 18 and 59.
Lef
10 days ago