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Sehwag and Pathan may return for ODIs against Australia

Virender Sehwag and Irfan Pathan could see a return to the ODI squad for the series against Australia

Anand Vasu
Anand Vasu
17-Sep-2007


Will Irfan Pathan get the nod for the ODI series against Australia? © Getty Images
While all the speculation over Tuesday's selection committee meeting surrounds the appointment of a new captain for the seven-match home ODI series against Australia, the day's agenda goes beyond that. They have to answer some tricky questions when they pick the one-day squad, the foremost being whether Harbhajan Singh and Virender Sehwag have done enough to make a comeback. They will also have to see how to find room for Irfan Pathan.
In the recent past the selectors have resisted the temptation to make wholesale changes to the limited-overs team, chopping and changing only when fitness issues arose. And there is one in front of them: Munaf Patel, who was drafted into the team in place of Sreesanth for the ODI series in England, fell well short of expectations. He managed no more than a handful of overs at decent pace and Venkatesh Prasad, the bowling coach, questioned the "intensity level" with which he was operating. The timing and manner of Prasad's statements - openly to the media, midway through the series - were surprising but it's indicative that the team may have run out of patience with Munaf.
Munaf's exit will likely afford Ajit Agarkar another chance in the one-day team, something that might otherwise have been in doubt.
Irfan Pathan has rediscovered the swing that made him such a potent force when he arrived in international cricket and has made telling contributions with the bat and on the field for India A. Though he is far from back to his best - the rhythm and pace still need plenty of work - he is clearly on the road to rehabilitation. When Pathan was axed from the team his bowling had fallen apart, with no swing and no real pace making him cannon fodder for the batsmen.
If the Pathan question is easily answered by Munaf's exit, the selectors have a slightly more tricky task deciding on what to do with Sehwag and Harbhajan. Neither has performed exceptionally well in the ICC World Twenty20 but Harbhajan has been on the ball. He has bowled with control and good rhythm, and would surely have been pushing for a place had the two incumbent spinners, Piyush Chawla and Ramesh Powar, not done so outstandingly well in the last series.
While the medium-pacers came in for some tap, both Powar and Chawla exerted great control over England's batsmen. Even Kevin Pietersen, who has dominated spinners of the quality of Shane Warne and Muttiah Muralitharan, found it hard to get both Powar and Chawla away. Powar slowed things down cleverly while Chawla had the advantage of being able to bowl his legbreak and googly from the same line. The fact that both spinners held their own might just make it hard for Harbhajan to force his way back in.
The question of Sehwag is more tricky. The fact that he doesn't find a place in either the Test or one-day team makes things a bit difficult for Dilip Vengsarkar and company. It's no secret that Sehwag was being groomed for the captaincy, the thinking being that he was the link between the Tendulkar-Ganguly-Dravid generation and the one that would succeed it. This fact kept Sehwag in the team longer than many expected, even after he lost form, but now the case for Sehwag might build again, with Dravid giving up the reins.
This could spell the end for Rohit Sharma, who was in the squad but did not get a game in the seven-match series in England and is yet to find a place in the eleven in the ICC World Twenty20.
Vengsarkar is tight-lipped about the selection, and it seems his colleagues aren't fully in the loop when it comes to the captaincy question. All will be revealed on Tuesday, and though there is room for surprises, don't be surprised if Vengsarkar doesn't ring in too much change.

Anand Vasu is associate editor of Cricinfo