Plans to prepare faster wickets in India
The need of the hour for Indian cricket is fast, hard and true wickets
Partab Ramchand
18-Dec-1999
The need of the hour for Indian cricket is fast, hard and true
wickets. Otherwise, the unhappy trend of the Indian team doing well at
home but failing miserably abroad will continue. Fully aware of the
problem, the pitches and grounds committee of the Board of Control for
Cricket in India, which met in Chennai on Saturday decided to tackle
it head on.
Briefing reporters, former Indian captain K Srikkanth who heads the
committee, said discussions at the meeting centred around the urgent
need of changing the nature of wickets in the country. He said the
pitches had to be prepared in such a way that they encouraged the
pacemen with their bounce and also gave hope to the spinners on the
last two days of a game. He said it was possible to prepare such
wickets in India for there were qualified groundsmen. In any case, the
trend of preparing tracks which turned prodigiously from the first day
would have to go. It made for a sub standard cricket match and also
led to the team faring miserably when they played abroad.
Srikkanth said the pitch preparation process was viewed by the
committee on a long term basis. There could be no short term plans, he
emphasized. He said BCCI president AC Muthiah was very keen on
changing the nature of the wickets and had advocated that soil
mechanics who were experts in the trade could be consulted on the
matter.
Srikkanth said that as the scope of the committee also included
facilities at the ground and available infrastructure the members
would inspect the venues selected for the South African tour to this
country in February-March next year and meet again in Mumbai on
January 7 to review the situation.
Srikkanth said the pitch preparation process was viewed by the
committee on a long term basis. There could be no short term plans, he
emphasized. He said BCCI president AC Muthiah was very keen on
changing the nature of the wickets and had advocated that soil
mechanics who were experts in the trade could be consulted on the
matter.
Srikkanth said that as the scope of the committee also included
facilities at the ground and available infrastructure the members
would inspect the venues selected for the South African tour to this
country in February-March next year and meet again in Mumbai on
January 7 to review the situation.