India vs NZ 3rd Test preview: India keen to avoid embarrassing whitewash
The Hindu
India faces the possibility of a whitewash at home against New Zealand, with spin likely to play a crucial role.
So dominant has India been at home, especially in the last decade, that visiting sides rarely have the upper hand in India. But over the next five days – despite the rest of the country being in a festive mood – Rohit Sharma and Co. will have to deal with the dreadful thought of India being whitewashed in a Test series, that too at home!
What seemed unthinkable till a fortnight ago appears to be a real possibility over the next five days. Tom Latham’s New Zealand has already created a record in Pune by winning its first series in India, and being the first team to beat India in India since 2012. The upbeat Kiwis will be hoping to shatter another streak, of completing a clean sweep in India by a visiting team in almost a quarter of a century.
Albeit in a two-Test series, South Africa had beaten India 2-0 in 2000. Since then, India has never found itself in such an awkward territory. Add to it the Wankhede Test match being India’s last outing ahead of a gruelling five-Test tour to Australia and the last of the home season Tests becomes even more important.
That’s not it. Thanks to the sorry losses in the last two weeks, India finds itself in a precarious position when it comes to qualifying for the World Test Championship final. Winning four of the remaining six Tests – including the Wankhede Test – is a must for India to have a clear passage into the WTC final.
Considering all the facets, it’s high time India’s batting comes good in the first innings. The lack of a good first innings total – 46 followed by 156 in entirely different conditions in Bengaluru and Pune, respectively – is concerning. In this aspect, India will be banking on the three hometown heroes – captain Rohit, his opening partner Yashasvi Jaiswal and Sarfaraz Khan – to set the tone.
Barring Rohit, the other two have had at least one notable knock in the series so far, while Jaiswal has been the stand-out India performer this calendar year. If the trio can give the home fans a reason to rejoice, especially in the first innings, India can hope to board a plane to Australia next week high on confidence.
But the conditions at the Wankhede are set to be starkly different than the hometowners are used to. The surface at the Wankhede Stadium is likely to be a turning track – posing a challenger as severe as, if not worse than Pune – contrary to the hard deck they are used to on the red-soil surface.