RedwoodOriginal
Senior T20I Player
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2018
- Runs
- 17,441
- Post of the Week
- 4
For me, one thing that comes to mind that maybe behind Pakistan doing well in England in recent times is the preparation that India seem to neglect. In 2016, Pakistan spent 3 weeks practicing with the Dukes ball at the training camp in Lahore and arrived in England a month in advance. In 2017/18 all FC matches in Pakistan were played with the Dukes ball and even though Pakistan were playing 2 tests they arrived a month in advance and played more practice games (3) than the actual tests. India played 1 practice game before a 5 match test series and even that was shortened by a day.
I know India have been in England for a long time as well but playing limited-overs games on flat-pitches does not acclimatize you with the conditions.
Even Australia's example is something for India to learn from. Australia spent a significant amount of time in the UAE before their last tour of India, where they set up a training camp and practiced on pitches similar to the ones they would encounter in India and as a result Australia produced their best performance in India since 2004, looked so much better against spin and actually beat India on a rank-turner.
Pakistan themselves have not always taken preparation seriously. After the successful tour of England in 2016 they should have done the same for the tours of New Zealand and Australia (not that that would have made a difference in Australia anyway). But the way the Pakistani batsmen were batting in New Zealand showed most of all that they couldn't grapple with conditions at all.
All this ofcourse, highlights the importance of preparation that I think all teams should begin to realize. Back in the day there were an insane first-class matches before a tour. And now that the training and coaching methods have gotten so much more advanced teams should do everything they can do make sure they are properly prepared to battle the conditions. You can have all the ability, class, temperament in the world and it will go out the window if you are not prepared.
Ultimately, this is something for the boards to ponder most. I think many boards probably neglect this because of the extra cost that goes into setting a preparatory camp and arriving in a country early. But if any team, not just India is serious about winning overseas the boards, administrators, coaches need to take the initiative and focus on preparation.
I know India have been in England for a long time as well but playing limited-overs games on flat-pitches does not acclimatize you with the conditions.
Even Australia's example is something for India to learn from. Australia spent a significant amount of time in the UAE before their last tour of India, where they set up a training camp and practiced on pitches similar to the ones they would encounter in India and as a result Australia produced their best performance in India since 2004, looked so much better against spin and actually beat India on a rank-turner.
Pakistan themselves have not always taken preparation seriously. After the successful tour of England in 2016 they should have done the same for the tours of New Zealand and Australia (not that that would have made a difference in Australia anyway). But the way the Pakistani batsmen were batting in New Zealand showed most of all that they couldn't grapple with conditions at all.
All this ofcourse, highlights the importance of preparation that I think all teams should begin to realize. Back in the day there were an insane first-class matches before a tour. And now that the training and coaching methods have gotten so much more advanced teams should do everything they can do make sure they are properly prepared to battle the conditions. You can have all the ability, class, temperament in the world and it will go out the window if you are not prepared.
Ultimately, this is something for the boards to ponder most. I think many boards probably neglect this because of the extra cost that goes into setting a preparatory camp and arriving in a country early. But if any team, not just India is serious about winning overseas the boards, administrators, coaches need to take the initiative and focus on preparation.