The error of their ways
Of the four grounds to host Test matches in this series, Headingley must have been least favourite to witness an Indian win
Samanth Subramanian
28-Aug-2002
Of the four grounds to host Test matches in this series,
Headingley must have been least favourite to witness an Indian
win. Conditions in Yorkshire are usually overcast, usually
conducive to seam, and usually hostile to touring sides - not
exactly odds that India were favoured to buck.
But buck they did, and comprehensively. Losing by an innings and
49 runs - India's largest overseas victory margin ever - Nasser
Hussain must have wondered where on earth he went wrong. "We
didn't even bat that well," said Hussain after the Test. But he
had fingered the wrong department; it was the bowling that let
England down.
![]() Sachin Tendulkar against all bowlers - Indian first innings at Headingley © CricInfo |
Tendulkar's wagon-wheel reveals more. For the most part, Hussain
kept Ashley Giles and Andrew Flintoff around the wicket, aiming
at the batsman's body and not allowing him room to free his arms.
But Tendulkar still scored rapidly enough, making his runs off
330 deliveries. The only difference the line made was in the
distribution of runs around the wicket. More than half of the 193
came on the legside, with as many as 50 runs - including five
boundaries - in the square leg region.
Perhaps Tendulkar has worked out a method to play England's
restricting line. But it would be truer to say that there were so
many bad balls on offer that he was perfectly content to block
the occasional good delivery. He also worked the ball to great
effect; in spite of scoring 45 runs more than Rahul Dravid,
Tendulkar sent the ball to the ropes one time less. His innings
was largely a matter of tapping wayward deliveries away for
singles and smashing only the extra-ordinarily bad balls for four
or six.
England's bowlers, in other words, maintained neither correct
line nor length. The bowling was too short and off-target,
virtually inviting India's best batsmen to help themselves to
centuries, which they did obligingly. Scintillating as the
batting was, deserving of the highest praise, there is no doubt
that England had more than a small role to play in India racking
up their largest total overseas.