
Unsheathed- by fans, media and critics - to 'decapitate' the heads of the famed and much - celebrated middle order batsmen of the Indian cricket team in the aftermath of the recent Test series in Sri Lanka.
In fact , in these days of real-time public guillotining and instant judgment (and literally by the second on cricket portals and Websites and by the half-hour on "hysterical' news channels), the collective failures of the Big Four batsmen or the four Pandavas (ironic that Virender Sehwag with his excellent Test match performances and records in the same golden period of the Big Four has only belatedly been anointed the fifth Pandava) were magnified and they were roundly criticised and mercilessly vilified - and this despite the stupendous and history-defining gold medal winning performance of Abhinav Bindra at the Beijing Olympics during the third Test. And rightly so, would aver even the most ardent supporters and massive fan bases of these icons.
But the interregnum between the end of this Test series and the next one against the Australian cricket team in October could be a good period for sane reflection, dissection of their performances, dispassionate analysis of their peaks and troughs during the past two years and the way ahead for the Test team - much on the lines of the "quasi-blueprint" which ODI/T20 captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni more than the BCCI or the national selectors seems to have drawn up for the Indian ODI and T20 teams.
Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman have formed the fulcrum of the Indian middle order in Tests for the better part of this decade - barring the period when Ganguly was dropped and Laxman benched occasionally to try out the five bowlers 'formula' in Tests which Dravid seemed to favor during his captaincy. While rarely have all of them clicked in unison, regular match-turning, match-creating and match-winning innings by a duo or a trio amongst the foursome have helped sustain consistent performances by the Indian cricket team and carve out significant Test victories and even historic series victories abroad (Pakistan, England, West Indies).
Dravid's prowess as a batsman between 2002 and 2006 in virtually every Test playing nation and performances in every conceivable match situation and playing conditions has been well documented and rightly placed him on the podium of all-time batting greats.
While Tendulkar's recent form - perhaps due to numerous injury layoffs and the wear and tear of his body over a long playing period in international cricket - has not been anywhere close to the rich vein of form and buccaneering batting exploits witnessed during the mid-to-late nineties, he has blossomed at times and done well on important recent tours -England, Pakistan (2004 as against 2006) and Australia (2003 and 2007).
Surprisingly, it has been Ganguly -for many critics and aficionados -who has been the most consistent performer since his comeback in the Johannesburg Test in December 2006 and barring the tapering off in the final two Tests in the recent series against Australia and his poor returns in the just concluded series in Sri Lanka. The under-celebrated yet classy Laxman has performed in virtually every series for the past two years while peaking and performing as usual in Australia in 2007 - his favorite Test hunting ground.
However, if one considers physiological factors, fitness issues, vagaries of form and injuries or even technical aspects of batsmanship such as reflexes, hand-eye co-ordination, feet and head movement, shift of body weight while playing strokes or defensively, technical fortitude, overall skills against both pace and spin; then perhaps a clearer picture can be drawn about recent performances and the near-future performing potential of the Big Four.
Seen in that light and perspective, the most perceptible decline can be seen in Dravid's game which though can also be attributed to other factors like the captaincy resignation imbroglio and his axing from the ODI team almost immediately thereafter in the latter half of 2007.
Dravid has struggled for the better part of nearly two seasons now with only his famed grit, resolve, immense powers of concentration and technical aptitude seeing him through to some significant scores -notably 93 in the Perth win in 2008 and even that crucial 44 in the recent Galle victory.
On the other hand, Ganguly -arguably the least fit of the lot- has actually racked up the most number of runs amongst the Big Four since his comeback (even accounting for Tendulkar missing three Tests and Laxman being dropped for 2 during the same period), and has enjoyed perhaps his most sustained and best Test run in his career up till the end of the SA tour of India in 2008. In fact, Ganguly -considered the 4th in the pecking order amongst the Big Four in terms of Test match batting skills, performance and aptitude - has been the best performing recent Test batsman or among the top 2 in averages and runs scored in at least 4 series (away tours against SA and England and against Pakistan and SA in India).
But an important point needs to be highlighted before the selectors sit down to draw up a future plan for the Test team as well so that there is no ad-hoc chopping or mass sacking just on the basis of perhaps the first collective failure of the Big 4 in one series in recent memory. And that fact is that these 4 (Ganguly more as a captain than as a batsman) have been at their very resilient and performing best against Australia in at least three series in this millennium.
All four clicked in near unison in that landmark series in Australia in 2003. Laxman and Dravid's exploits in the high-octane and well-contested series of 2001 - along with Tendulkar's strong performances in the decider at Chennai - are part of cricketing folklore now. Tendulkar and Laxman were luminous and free-flowing and exhibited the classicality of sub -continental batsmanship in the just concluded series Down Under. And the Big 3 - Tendulkar, Ganguly and Dravid - have tremendous records against England and can be expected to perform creditably against the visiting Englishmen towards the end of the year.
So a total of 6 Tests can be a fair evaluation of the Big 4 in terms of commitment levels, actual performances (more for the team cause and rather than the self-survival instincts that Ganguly and Laxman seem to exhibit at times for fear of being axed at the first possible opportunity) and overall fit in the scheme of things till the end of the season Test matches against New Zealand in 2009.
There should be no question about their motivation levels as Dravid and Tendulkar being justifiably proud of their Test achievements and records would be expected to try and maintain their high standards.
And Ganguly since being sacked as a captain has been on a mission to restate his Test match credentials. The youngest of the lot Laxman could be the last to be phased out and that should goad him to be more at his naturally attacking best and not the conservative mode that he seems to be getting into of late.
While it is not necessary to always look at or follow the Australian cricket system, it should be noted that Darren Lehmann, Michael Hussey, Brad Hodge and even Brad Haddin, had to go through the grind season after season in the tough Australian domestic cricket arena and notch up huge and consistent scores in the Pura Cup (formerly Sheffield Shield) before being considered for selection. All of them got Test caps at a fairly late age. For that matter, even Damien Martyn and Matthew Hayden since their axing in the early nineties have attributed their celebrated and high-performance comebacks in Tests to the years of honing their techniques and polishing their batting skills in domestic cricket.
None of these players were just handed a Test cap or tried out in the name of building future teams and this despite the extended loss of form of Mark Waugh, Steve Waugh and Mark Taylor at various times during the nineties. It was only when the right and mature replacements were identified and after extended apprenticeships in domestic cricket were they tried or reinstated.
Amongst the batch of Indian players fighting to break into the middle order, only S. Badrinath has done the hard yards in domestic cricket. Suresh Raina, Rohit Sharma, Manoj Tiwary, Robin Uthappa and even Yuvraj Singh have rarely, if ever, run up sustained performances in Ranji and Duleep Trophy cricket before being fast-forwarded into the ODI teams on the strength of sheer potential and talent.
Laxman during his occasional exiles from the Indian team used to grind it out in domestic cricket, build up concentration levels, big innings playing skills before translating that form, stamina and performance in Test matches almost immediately after being recalled.
Gautam Gambhir after his middling performances in Tests in his previous stints realized the value of big and long innings and racked up consistent scores in domestic cricket which has translated into his current superb and highly consistent run in all 3 formats of the game. Wasim Jaffer before being exposed a bit against the Aussies and against SA recently had done likewise for four years before his second and relatively more successful comeback in 2006. A couple of generations ago (in cricketing terms), Mohinder Amarnath did the same before his comeback and world-beating performances on the twin tours of Pakistan and West Indies in the 1982-83 season - and against 2 of the most potent and best bowling attacks of the eighties.
The point is unlike in an ODI or a T20, one cannot just try out players - and especially young or rookie players - in Test matches and only the proven best and seasoned players have to play at most times. Upcoming players have to be seen to be Test match ready or a young player should show extraordinary potential or possess rare talent which seems to be so only in the case of Rohit Sharma currently from the new crop. In much the same manner as it has been in the case of Michael Clarke - though even he had to bide his time before the retirements of Lehmann and Martyn to get a chance to re-establish himself after his debut at a young age in 2004 - and Alistair Cook.
While there can be no room for sentiments in modern day cricket and more so given the dictates of commercial interests and stricter accountability, still the Big 4 because of their proven talent and immense experience deserve another chance in the forthcoming Tests and not necessarily due to their past performances and indisputably fine records alone.
Successful and performing Test teams (and the Indian Test team has been one in this millennium) cannot and should never be dismantled overnight. History bears witness to what happened to Australia in the mid-80s (after the retirements of Greg Chappell, Rodney Marsh, Jeff Thomson and Dennis Lillee almost simultaneously) and West Indies in the early-90s (after the ousters of Viv Richards and Gordon Greenidge and the retirements of Malcolm Marshall and Jeff Dujon). Australian cricket took a decade to recover and West Indies has been in a state of near terminal decline since the loss of the "unofficial" World Champions-deciding Test series to Australia in 1995.
A 3-1 or even a 2-0 loss against the hungry and craving- for- redemption Australians (after their pyrrhic 2-1 victory over India early this year) without any 2 or 3 of the Big 4 can actually set back Indian cricket badly and even blemish the proud record of the Indian Test team against the best team of this era since 1996 (8 wins for India as against 10 for Australia in 22 well-contested Test matches including the one-off Test in Delhi in 1996), - a year when Dravid Ganguly and Laxman (after brief stints as an opener and the forced ouster of Mohammed Azharuddin) started playing alongside the already legendary Tendulkar to form the famed and long-serving Indian middle order quartet in Test cricket.
A year down the line, the future Indian Test team line- up in batting order could possibly look something like this:
Virender Sehwag (captain)
Gautam Gambhir
Rohit Sharma
S. Badrinath
Manoj Tiwary (Tiwary has raw talent, skills and rare stroke playing ability but his confidence level needs to be boosted)
Yuvraj Singh/Suresh Raina (if the Big 4 are ousted or phased out, Yuvraj for all his tepid Test performances of late will have to come into the reckoning again)
Mahendra Singh Dhoni
Piyush Chawla
Harbhajan Singh
Ishant Sharma
S. Sreesanth
Reserves
Akash Chopra (has done enough in domestic cricket to deserve another chance and still has the fortitude of a Test opener)
Pragyan Ojha
R. P. Singh
Zaheer Khan
Irfan Pathan
Dark Horses/Other Reserve Players
M. Kaif
Munaf Patel
Robin Uthappa
Cheteshwar Pujara
Shikhar Dhawan
Wriddhiman Saha
Manpreet Gony