'Why Do We Need Turning Tracks...' Sourav Ganguly Opines As Jasprit Bumrah Scalps Six-Wicket Haul During IND vs ENG 2nd Test 2024 in Vizag
The former BCCI chief had also expressed a similar view during India's home series against Australia early last year, particularly after the Indore pitch earned “poor” rating from the ICC.
Visakhapatnam, Feb 3: Jasprit Bumrah's throbbing afternoon spell on the second day of the second Test against England here on Saturday made former Indian skipper Sourav Ganguly advocating for sporting pitches rather than preparing rank turners. Bumrah homed in on a six-wicket haul putting India in the driver's seat by dismissing the likes of Joe Root, Jonny Bairstow, Ollie Pope and Ben Stokes. Jasprit Bumrah Becomes Fastest Indian Pacer to Complete 150 Wickets in Test Cricket, Achieves Feat During India vs England 2nd Test 2024.
It wasn't entirely surprising then to see Ganguly, a lifelong supporter of pace bowling and sporting tracks, airing his views in favour of decks that keeps bowlers of all genres in the game, rather than just spinners. "When I see Bumrah, Shami, Siraj, Mukesh bowl, I wonder why do we need to prepare turning tracks in India…my conviction of playing on good wickets keeps getting stronger every game.
They will get 20 wickets on any surface with Ashwin, Jadeja, Kuldeep and Axar (for support),” Ganguly wrote on his X (formerly Twitter) account.
Sourav Ganguly's Post
The former BCCI chief had also expressed a similar view during India's home series against Australia early last year, particularly after the Indore pitch earned “poor” rating from the ICC.
“Great to see Ashwin bowl so well on a good pitch… class will always show…Hopefully, this will be a good Test match…a good opportunity for Indian batsmen after some tuff wickets to bat on, in this series,” Ganguly had tweeted during the Ahmedabad Test after senior spinner Ravichandran Ashwin bagged six wickets. Shreyas Iyer Takes Spectacular Running Catch To Dismiss In-Form Zak Crawley During IND vs ENG 2nd Test 2024 (Watch Video).
Here too, Ganguly hinted that the overall batting quality in the longer format has dropped in the last few years because of preparing pitches with quick results in mind. "Batting quality dropping because of pitches in last 6 to 7 years at home…good wickets are a must…India will still win over 5 days,” said Ganguly.
(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)