India expects great things from Sehwag’s return

MUMBAI, (Reuters) – Former India players are united in  their belief that Virender Sehwag’s return from injury will  stabilise the team’s fragile batting order and lift morale in  the remaining two tests against a dominant England.

Virender Sehwag

The dashing opener has been sidelined since undergoing  shoulder surgery in May, keeping the 32-year-old out of the tour  of the West Indies and India’s first two tests against England.

India, 2-0 down in the four-match series, had looked nothing  like the world’s number one-ranked team in the Lord’s and Trent  Bridge tests but that could change with the return of the  explosive right-hander, according to Anshuman Gaekwad.

“It is almost going to be like a new series. To have Sehwag  and (Gautam) Gambhir back… It will give a lot of confidence to  the team,” the former India international and coach told  Reuters.

Sehwag’s opening partner Gambhir injured his elbow while  fielding at Lord’s and missed the 319-run defeat at Trent Bridge  but is likely to return to the starting lineup for the third  test beginning on Aug. 10 at Edgbaston in Birmingham.

The injuries to the top order forced India to tinker with  the batting lineup, placing Rahul Dravid in a makeshift opener’s  role and Vangipurappu Laxman up the order at number three.

“In a test match, it is of utmost necessity to have a good  start. Their return will be a big relief for the captain and the  team,” emphasised the former India opener, who played 40 test  matches from 1975-85.

Sehwag has 22 hundreds in 87 test appearances but it his  strike rate of almost 82 runs per 100 deliveries that make him  one of the most intimidating batsmen in cricket.

Former captain Ajit Wadekar said Sehwag’s return would ease  the pressure on India’s “Big Three” — Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar  and Laxman.

“Sehwag coming back itself is enough to boost the morale of  the team. We never had a solid opening partnership in the  series,” Wadekar, the former chief of national selectors, said  by phone.

“If our openers do their bit, batsmen down the order will  start gaining in confidence.”

MATCH PRACTICE

Sehwag’s audacious strokeplay might be the ideal  counter-attacking ploy the team needed to recover from the heavy  defeats and avoid a two-clear test series defeat that would  enable England to leapfrog India at the top of the rankings.

“The opposition bowlers also get disheartened by Sehwag’s  presence,” the 70-year old Wadekar said.

India will play a two-day tour game against Northamptonshire  starting on Friday and it will be Sehwag’s only chance to  acclimatise himself to the conditions before the third test  starts on Aug. 10.

“I don’t know how much practice he will get. He has been out  for so long after the injury. Hope he acclimatises quickly with  the conditions there,” Wadekar, who led India to series  victories in West Indies and England in 1971, said.

Former India captain Sourav Ganguly also doubted whether  Sehwag had enough time to get match fit.

“It has to be seen whether the dynamic opener has had enough  cricket or whether the Northants game is enough to get him ready  for Birmingham,” Ganguly wrote in a column which was published  in the Hindustan Times yesterday.