Monday 2 January 2012

Match Details

Mon Dec 26 - Fri Dec 30

1st Test - Australia vs Indi
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne


Tue Jan 3 - Sat Jan 7

2nd Test - Australia vs India
Sydney Cricket Ground, Sydney


Tue Jan 24 - Sat Jan 28


4th Test - Australia vs India
Adelaide Oval, Adelaide


Wed Feb 1


1st T20 - Australia vs India
ANZ Stadium, Sydney


Fri Feb 3

2nd T20 - Australia vs India
Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne

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ICC World Twenty20


The ICC World Twenty20 or ICC World T20 also referred to as the T20 World Cup is the international championship of Twenty20 cricket. The event is organised by the sport's governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC). The tournament consists of 12 teams in which all the ten ICC Full Members are automatically qualified and the remaining two spots will be contested through ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier. The event is held every two years.

The inaugural event, the 2007 ICC World Twenty20, was staged in South Africa from 11–24 September 2007. The tournament was won by India, who became the first World T20 Champions after defeating Pakistan by 5 runs in the final at Johannesburg. The second event, the 2009 ICC World Twenty20 took place in England from 5–21 June 2009. This tournament was won by the previous runners-up Pakistan who defeated Sri Lanka by 8 wickets in the final at Lord's, London.[1] The third tournament, the 2010 ICC World Twenty20 was held from 30 April–16 May 2010 and hosted by the West Indies. The winners were England who defeated Australia by 7 wickets in the final at Kensington Oval, Barbados. This was the first ever ICC tournament won by England.

Format


Rules and regulations

During the group stage and Super Eight, points are awarded to the teams as follows:


Results Points
Win 2 points
No result 1 point
Loss 0 points
In case of a Tie (i.e. both teams score exactly the same number of runs at the end of their respective innings), a Super Over would decide the winner. In case of a Tie again in the Super Over, the match is won by the team that has scored the most 6s in their innings. This is applicable in all stages of the tournament. But this provision came in existence from 2009. During the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 tournament, the provision for deciding the winner in case of a Tie was a Bowl-out.[2]
Within each group (both group stage & Super Eight stage), teams are ranked against each other based on the following criteria:[3]

1. Higher number of points
2. If equal, higher number of wins
3. If still equal, higher net run rate
4. If still equal, lower bowling strike rate
5. If still equal, result of head to head meeting.

Qualification
All Test-playing nations achieve automatic qualification to the tournament, with the remaining places filled by ICC associate member nations through a qualification tournament.

Qualification for the 2007 World Twenty20 came from the results of the first cycle of the ICC World Cricket League - a 50-over format league for non-Test playing nations. The two finalists of the Division One tournament - Kenya and Scotland - qualified for the inaugural World Twenty20 tournament alongside the Test-playing nations. Qualification for subsequent tournaments, beginning with the 2009 event, is achieved through a special event using the twenty20 format.

A World Twenty20 Qualifier was held in 2008 as qualifier for the 2009 World Twenty20 and currently is the main qualification tournament for all the upcoming World Twenty20's tournaments. The 2008 Qualifiers were played between 2 August and 5 August 2008 in Stormont, Belfast in Northern Ireland. The six competing teams were: Bermuda, Canada, Ireland, Kenya, The Netherlands and Scotland, with the top three earning a place at the 2009 World Twenty20 in England. The competition was won by Ireland and the Netherlands, who shared the trophy after rain forced the final to be abandoned without a ball bowled. Both teams qualified for the 2009 finals in England. Due to the withdrawal of Zimbabwe from the competition, the two finalists were joined by third-placed Scotland.

The 2010 Qualifier was the largest so far, with eight competing teams. It was played in the United Arab Emirates from 9–13 February 2010 with the top two teams progressing to the 2010 tournament in the Caribbean. The eight competing teams were: Afghanistan, Canada, Ireland, Kenya, the Netherlands, Scotland, UAE and the USA.[4] The competition was won by Afghanistan who qualified along with Ireland who were second.

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Mahendra Singh Dhoni


Mahendra Singh Dhoni pronunciation (help·info) (Hindi: महेन्द्र सिंह धोनी) (born 7 July 1981) is an Indian cricketer and the current captain of the Indian national cricket team. He made his One Day International (ODI) debut in December 2004 against Bangladesh, and a year later played his first Test, this time against Sri Lanka.

Under his captaincy, India won the 2007 ICC World Twenty20, CB Series of 2007–08, the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in 2008 and 2010 against Australia 2–0 and 2011 World Cup. His Test, ODI record is best among all the Indian captains to date. He also captained Chennai Super Kings to victory in the recent 2011 IPL and in the Champions League. He is now captain of India in all three forms of the game and also led the team to their first ever bilateral ODI series wins in Sri Lanka and New Zealand. Under Dhoni's captaincy India became the first team after a gap of more than 20 years to whitewash Australia in a Test series. Dhoni also led the Indian team to the number one position in ICC rankings in Test cricket for the first time. Dhoni has also been the recipient of many awards including the ICC ODI Player of the Year award in 2008 and 2009 (the first Indian player to achieve this feat), the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award and the Padma Shri, India's fourth highest civilian honour in 2009. In 2009 Dhoni topped the list of world’s top 10 earning cricketers compiled by Forbes.[1] He was named as the captain of ICC World Test and ICC ODI teams for 2009. In the final of the 2011 Cricket World Cup, he hit 91 not out of just 79 balls to lead India to victory. For his outstanding batting in the final, he was awarded as the man of the match. The TIME magazine added him in its "Time 100" list of 100 most influential people of 2011.[2] According to the SportsPro magazine Dhoni is 10th most valuable brand in field of sports worldwide and number 1 among all Asian superstars.[3]
Personal life

Mahendra Singh Dhoni was born in Ranchi, Bihar (now in Jharkhand) in a Rajput family to Pan Singh and Devaki Devi.[4] His paternal village Lvali is in the Lamgarha block of the Almora District of Uttarakhand. Dhoni's parents, moved from Uttarakhand to Ranchi where Pan Singh worked in junior management positions in MECON. Dhoni has a sister Jayanti and a brother Narendra. Dhoni had long hair which he has now shortened; he cut it because he wanted to look like his favourite film star John Abraham(actor). He likes bikes. A Hummer to add to the four cars and 23 high-speed motorcycles already parked in his garage in Ranchi. He endorses 15 brands from clothes to cold Drinks. He is also one of the highest income tax payers in last year[5] Dhoni is a fan of Adam Gilchrist, and his childhood idols were cricket teammate Sachin Tendulkar, Bollywood actor Amitabh Bachchan and singer Lata Mangeshkar.Shreya Ghoshal is his current favourite singer. He said this in front a press conference with Pune Mirror.[6][7]
Dhoni studied at DAV Jawahar Vidya Mandir, Shyamali,(now the school is known as JVM, Shyamli, Ranchi) Ranchi, Jharkhand where he initially excelled in badminton and football and was selected at district and club level in these sports. Dhoni was a goalkeeper for his football team and was sent to play cricket for a local cricket club by his football coach. Though he had not played cricket, Dhoni impressed with his wicket-keeping skills and became the regular wicketkeeper at the Commando cricket club (1995–1998). Based on his performance at club cricket, he was picked for the 1997/98 season Vinoo Mankad Trophy Under-16 Championship and he performed well.[5] Dhoni focused on cricket after his 10th standard.[8]
Dhoni married Sakshi (née Rawat) on 4 July 2010. Sakshi Dhoni, a native of Dehradun, Uttarakhand. At the time of their marriage, she was studying Hotel Management and was working as a trainee at the Taj Bengal, Kolkata. After the retirement of Sakshi’s father from tea gardens, their family shifted to their native place, Dehradun.
The wedding stumped the media and the fans as it took place only a day after the couple got engaged.[9][10] Bollywood actress Bipasha Basu, a close friend of Dhoni, was quick to inform the media that the wedding was planned for months and was not a spur of the moment decision.[11]

ODI career

The Indian team in the 2000s saw the use of Rahul Dravid as the wicket-keeper to ensure that the wicket-keeper spot didn't lack in batting talent.[29] The Indian cricket establishment also saw the entry of wicket-keeper/batsmen from the junior ranks with talents like Parthiv Patel and Dinesh Karthik – both India U-19 Captains in the test squads.[29] With Dhoni making a mark in the India-A squad, he was picked in the ODI squad for the Bangladesh tour in 2004/05.[31] Dhoni did not have a great start to his ODI career, getting run out for a duck on debut.[32] In spite of an average series against Bangladesh, Dhoni was picked for the Pakistan ODI series.[33] In the second match of the series, Dhoni in his fifth one-day international, scored 148 in Vishakapatnam off only 123 deliveries. Dhoni's 148 surpassed the earlier record for the highest score by an Indian wicketkeeper,[34] a record that he would re-write before the end of the year.

Dhoni had few batting opportunities in the first two games of the Sri Lankan bilateral ODI series (October–November 2005) and was promoted to No. 3 in the third ODI at Sawai Mansingh Stadium (Jaipur). Sri Lanka had set India a target of 299 after a Kumar Sangakkara century and in reply, India lost Tendulkar early. Dhoni was promoted to accelerate the scoring and ended the game with an unbeaten 183 off 145 balls, winning the game for India[35] – an innings described in Wisden Almanack (2006) as 'Uninhibited, yet anything but crude'.[36] The innings set various records including the highest Individual score in ODI cricket in the second innings,[37] a record that still stands. Dhoni ended the series with the highest run aggregate (346)[38] and was awarded the Man of the series award for his efforts. In December 2005, Dhoni was signed by BCCI to a B-grade contract, skipping the initial C-grade level due to his performance on the cricketing field.[39]
India scored 328 in 50 overs with Dhoni contributing 68 in their first match of 2006 against Pakistan. However the team finished poorly, scoring just 43 runs in the last eight overs and lost the match due to Duckworth-Lewis method.[40] In the third match of the series, Dhoni came in with India in a precarious situation and scored 72 runs off just 46 balls that included 13 boundaries to help India take a 2–1 lead in the series.[41][42] The final match of the series had a repeat performance as Dhoni scored 77 runs off 56 balls to enable India win the series 4–1.[43] In recognition of his consistent ODI performances, Dhoni overtook Ricky Ponting as number one in the ICC ODI rankings for batsmen on 20 April 2006.[44] His reign lasted just a week as Adam Gilchrist's performance against Bangladesh moved him to the top spot.[45]
Two cancelled series in Sri Lanka, one due to the withdrawal of South Africa from the Unitech Cup due to security concerns[46] and the replacement 3-match ODI bilateral series against Sri Lanka washed due to rain,[47] was India's prelude to another disappointing tournament – DLF Cup 2006-07. Dhoni scored 43 runs as the team lost twice in three games and did not qualify for the finals. India's lack of preparation showed in the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy as they lost to West Indies and Australia, though Dhoni scored a half-century against West Indies. The story of the ODI series in South Africa was the same for both Dhoni and India as Dhoni scored 139 runs in 4 matches and India lost the series 4–0. From the start of the WI ODI series, Dhoni had played 16 matches, hit just two fifties and averaged 25.93. Dhoni received criticism on his wicket keeping technique from former wicketkeeper Syed Kirmani.[48]
Preparations for the 2007 Cricket World Cup improved as India recorded identical 3–1 victories over West Indies and Sri Lanka and Dhoni had averages in excess of 100 in both these series. However, India unexpectedly crashed out the World Cup after losses to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Dhoni was out for a duck in both these matches and scored 29 runs in the tournament. After the loss to Bangladesh in 2007 Cricket World Cup, the house that Dhoni was constructing in his home-town Ranchi was vandalised and damaged by political activists of JMM.[49] The local police arranged for security for his family as India exited the World cup in the first round.[50]
Dhoni put his disappointment in the World cup behind him by scoring 91* against Bangladesh after India were left in a tight spot earlier in the run-chase. Dhoni was declared the man of the match for his performance, his fourth in ODI cricket. He was also later adjudged the man of the series after the third game of the series was washed away. Dhoni had a good Afro-Asia Cup, getting 174 runs in 3 matches at an average of 87.00, with a blitzkrieg 139 not out of 97 balls, a Man Of The Match innings, in the 3rd ODI.
Dhoni was nominated as the vice-captain of the ODI team for the series against South Africa in Ireland and the subsequent India-England 7-match ODI series.[13] Dhoni, who received a 'B' grade contract in December 2005, was awarded an 'A' grade contract in June 2007. And also he was elected as captain of Indian Twenty-20 Cricket Team for the World Twenty20 in September 2007. On 2 September 2007 Mahendra Singh Dhoni equalled his idol Adam Gilchrist's international record for the most dismissals in an innings in ODI by catching 5 English players and stumping one.[51] He led India to the ICC World Twenty 20 trophy in South Africa with a victory over arch rivals Pakistan in an intensely fought final on 24 September 2007, and became the second Indian captain to have won a World cup in any form of cricket, after Kapil Dev. Dhoni took his first wicket and ODI wicket on 30 September 2009. He bowled Travis Dowlin from the West Indies. During the series between India and Australia, Dhoni hit an aggressive 124 runs in just 107 balls, in the second ODI, and a measured knock of 71 runs in 95 balls, along with Yuvraj Singh, saw India home by 6 wickets, in the third ODI.
Dhoni topped the ICC ODI Batsman rankings for several months continuously in 2009, it was Hussy from Australia who replaced him for the top spot in the beginning of 2010.
Dhoni had an excellent year in ODIs in 2009 scoring 1198 runs in just 24 innings at an astonishing average of 70.43. Dhoni was also the joint top-scorer in ODIs in 2009 along with Ricky Ponting, but the latter having played in 30 innings.

Test career

Following his good one-day form against Sri Lanka, Dhoni replaced Dinesh Karthik in December 2005 as the Indian Test wicket-keeper.[52] Dhoni scored 30 runs in his debut match that was marred by rain. Dhoni came to the crease when the team was struggling at 109/5 and as wickets kept falling around him, he played an aggressive innings and was the last man dismissed.[53] Dhoni made his maiden half-century in the second Test and his quick scoring rate (half century came off 51 balls) aided India to set a target of 436 and the Sri Lankans were bowled out for 247.[54]
Following his good one-day form against Sri Lanka, Dhoni replaced Dinesh Karthik in December 2005 as the Indian Test wicket-keeper.[52] Dhoni scored 30 runs in his debut match that was marred by rain. Dhoni came to the crease when the team was struggling at 109/5 and as wickets kept falling around him, he played an aggressive innings and was the last man dismissed.[53] Dhoni made his maiden half-century in the second Test and his quick scoring rate (half century came off 51 balls) aided India to set a target of 436 and the Sri Lankans were bowled out for 247.[54]
Dhoni followed his maiden test century with some prosaic batting performances over the next three matches, one against Pakistan that India lost and two against England that had India holding a 1–0 lead going into the test match. Dhoni was the top scorer in India's first innings in the third test at Wankhede Stadium as his 64 aided India post a respectable 279 in reply to England's 400. However Dhoni and the Indian fielders dropped too many catches and missed many dismissal chances including a key stumping opportunity of Andrew Flintoff (14).[56] Dhoni failed to collect the Harbhajan Singh delivery cleanly as Flintoff went on to make 36 more runs as England set a target of 313 for the home team, a target that India were never in the reckoning. A batting collapse saw the team being dismissed for 100 and Dhoni scored just 5 runs and faced criticism for his wicket-keeping lapses as well as his shot selections.
On the West Indies tour in 2006, Dhoni scored a quick and aggressive 69 in the first Test at Antigua. The rest of the series was unremarkable for Dhoni as he scored 99 runs in the remaining 6 innings but his wicket-keeping skills improved and he finished the series with 13 catches and 4 stumpings. In the test series in South Africa, Dhoni's scores of 34 and 47 were not sufficient to save the second test against the Proteas as India lost the test series 2–1, squandering the chance to build on their first ever Test victory in South Africa (achieved in the first Test match). Dhoni's bruised hands ruled him out of the third test match.[57]
On the fourth day of the first Test match at Antigua Recreation Ground, St John's, Antigua during India's tour of West Indies, 2006, Dhoni's flick off Dave Mohammed to the midwicket region was caught by Daren Ganga. As the batsman started to walk back, captain Dravid declared

the innings when confusion started as the umpires were not certain if the fielder stepped on the ropes and Dhoni stayed for the umpire's verdict. While the replays were inconclusive, the captain of the West Indies side, Brian Lara, wanted Dhoni to walk-off based on the fielder's assertion of the catch. The impasse continued for more than 15 minutes and Lara's temper was on display with finger wagging against the umpires and snatching the ball from umpire Asad Rauf. Ultimately, Dhoni walked-off and Dravid's declaration was effected but the game was delayed, and Lara's action was criticised by the commentators and former players. Lara was summoned by the match referee to give an explanation of his actions but he was not fined.[58]
Dhoni scored two centuries in Sri Lanka's tour of India in 2009, a series of 3 matches in which he led India to a 2–0 victory. With this feat, India soared up to the number 1 position in Test cricket for the first time in history. India scored 726–9 (decl) in the third match of this series, which is their highest Test total ever.[59]

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Clarke pays respects to his home ground


Michael Clarke once said he would play cricket every day of the year if he could do so at the SCG. Though he did not make the all-time Australian XI compiled to mark the SCG's 100th Test, Clarke's story and technique are steeped in the history of the ground. His feet dance in accordance with the assistance on offer to the best spin bowlers, and his use of the crease both forward and back was fostered by the variety of fast and slow men who tried their luck on a surface with more subcontinental echoes than any other in Australia.

With this in mind, it is fitting that Clarke will lead Australia in the second Test against India, on a ground where he made his name and then enhanced it with strong showings as both a batsman and an occasional left-arm orthodox bowler. Intriguingly Clarke's record in Tests is curiously muted, having made only one century, against South Africa in 2009. But his love of the place is clear.

"I know we love playing here, I know I love playing here," Clarke said. "It's a great ground, it's my favourite to play and we've had a lot of success here at the SCG, so we're confident walking out onto that ground. It doesn't guarantee anything, but we're playing in front of our home crowd, for a lot of the guys it's their home ground as New South Welshmen and we're excited about this second Test match, it's a great time of year as well obviously to be playing Test cricket.

"It's nice to be playing at my home ground I guess and obviously the chance to captain Australia is very special in the 100th Test match here as well, so I think that will sink in over the next 24 hours. It's been quite a busy period from Melbourne, coming back here we've had a lot of stuff on, a lot of training, but over the next 24 hours I think the nerves will certainly kick in in regards to playing in another Test match at the SCG in front of my family and friends and now having the chance to captain here is certainly an honour and a privilege."

In his time at the SCG, Clarke has witnessed its character change from that of the slow turners of the 1990s into the more rounded, classical surface engineered by the curator Tom Parker in recent seasons. Those characteristics are in line with those loved by players of the 1950s and '60s, offering help to batsmen, quicks and spin bowlers in far more equal measure than when Clarke first visited.

"Conditions have probably changed a little bit over the last few years, no doubt the way I was brought up on this wicket it was spin conducive wasn't it," Clarke said. "I faced a lot of spin as a kid, I'd seen a fair bit of reverse swing at a young age and generally this wicket is a little bit slower than say Perth and Brisbane and what we've just seen in Melbourne.

"It encouraged me to move down the wicket to the spinners, no doubt, mainly because the ball spun so much and I wanted to get as close to it as I could before it spun too much. It's probably helped the way I play spin bowling, I've got to pay credit to the SCG.

"But the last couple of years it's quickened up a bit, there's been enough there for the bowlers, swing and seam and you need to try and adapt to that, but I think it certainly feels like my home ground. The way I play I guess is very similar to the conditions I've faced, from an 18-year-old boy until only until the last couple of years it's probably changed."

A panel comprising Jim Maxwell, Mike Coward, Phil Derriman, Gideon Haigh, Phil Wilkins, Malcolm Conn, Warwick Franks, Andrew Leeming, Malcolm Knox, and the SCG Trust chairman Rodney Cavalier, selected Australia and World teams from those who have graced the ground over its 100 Tests. Three men about to play in this match, Ricky Ponting, Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman, were chosen in the teams.

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Kings of the short form, knaves in Tests


In the space of two months, Indian cricket's year became a metaphorical exercise involving the contents of more than a single glass. Normally it would lead to a conclusion of: somewhere between empty and full. But India's contradictory performances over 2011 demand that the exercise be abandoned. There is, firstly, not just one glass under discussion here, and the others are housed in a completely different cabinet.

The World Cup victory brought with it the burst of a long-awaited Indian spring, with exhilaration and exhalation. Nearly three decades of yearning were wiped out with a single six by MS Dhoni. Like Kapil Dev's catch off Viv Richards in the 1983 final, that will be Dhoni's signature forever, the trophy his lasting legacy. A rousing, lusty soundtrack of public will drowned out the ticking heartbeat of India's measured progress to the title, accompanied by what coach Gary Kirsten called a "sense of destiny".

Heading into the tournament, India had warmed up nicely: they had won three of their last five series, including two at home, and the Asia Cup. When opening night arrived in Dhaka, India had a record of 19 wins and 13 losses in 32 matches over the last 13 months (8-1 at home)

The jigsaw of the World Cup was being pieced together. Resources were smartly and sparingly used. A cast of bowlers, high on skill and awareness in home conditions, was being picked from among the contenders who would eventually work around Zaheer Khan and Harbhajan Singh. Tryouts in the previous three home series saw Ashish Nehra return to the top of the queue and R Ashwin make his debut. Munaf Patel, by then over 50 ODIs old, may have been a second-choice support bowler to Zaheer but ended up a a first-rate replacement for the injured Praveen Kumar.

India's World Cup victory was the culmination of a collective striving: be it from the unheralded effort of men like Munaf or the born-again Yuvraj Singh. And from everyone left with unfinished business from the Wanderers in 2003, or even Port-of-Spain 2007.

Unlike Australia in 1987, Pakistan in 1992, or even Sri Lanka in 1996, India were not World Cup winners of youthful surprise or skin-of-their-teeth survival. Their title came from a rich core of experience, part-sweet, part-sour. With a battling league phase endured, India's A game fell into place in the knockout. As if it was, as Kirsten said, written.

The 2011 World Cup is now the new touchstone, bringing closure to the weight of 1983 and converting it into sepia legend. By 2015, the country's first full T20 generation will be knocking on the doors of ODI cricket. On paper, these will be more attacking batsmen, smarter bowlers and sharper fielders. In practice, the team will dominate at home and compete overseas.

In England this summer, if the Test team was well-beaten after the second Test, the ODI team always found a way to get back on its feet. Despite failing to win a single game, it was the only time India looked ready for a contest in England.

After that, they snapped back to their old habits, and have won nine of their last ten ODIs. Their bench strength could make up an entire new IPL franchise (the BCCI Ballyhoo?), senior players are seamlessly replaced and Rohit Sharma is back. After the World Cup victory, Dhoni said he liked the "variety" contained in ODIs, which brought, "a glimpse of not actually Test cricket" but a compressed version of its demands - with a definite result. If international cricket was only played in 50- and 20-over versions, India could grab the world No. 1 ranking in the near future and cling onto it.
Alas

Despite all trepidation (or hope), Test cricket is not dying. At its close, 2011 has raised an imperious forefinger to India and pointed at the icy statistic of five straight overseas Test defeats. Of India's 12 Tests in 2011, they won only three. All against West Indies, who, in a case of masterful planning, have played India in two three-Test series over six months. Of the four draws in the year, there were chances to win two, in St Lucia and Mumbai, but let those be. After five straight away defeats, draws now look like victories.

At the start of 2011 it had all looked so different: India had battled their way to a 1-1 draw in South Africa. More than any other result in their tenure as world Test No. 1, the result gave India's ranking some serious validation. (Until then they had played Bangladesh and Sri Lanka away and South Africa, Australia and New Zealand at home.) India had squared a series in South Africa for the first time in five series and 18 years.

The new year was to be the ideal launching platform for a year in which India could defend their ranking. There were tours of the West Indies, England and Australia lined up in ideal sequence. The team had plenty going for it: its best-ever opening pair was entrenched, its middle order deliciously seasoned, and the bowling attack reasonable, with options on the side.

By the end of 2011, everything had turned to custard. The No. 1 Test ranking had been handed over to England, and more grievously, the reputation as hardy travellers now seems a mere illusion. The final week of the year brought with it a sucker punch in Melbourne, against a supposedly shaky Australia. Once again, India opened a series with a Test defeat, a habit that

should have stopped being a cute quirk about five years ago.

Between the beginning and end of 2011, India put on display their soft middle in England. It was the first time England had even won a series against India since 1996. The 4-0 defeat may have been a prime example of a worst-case scenario - general World Cup and IPL fatigue, not enough warm-up games, injuries on tour, poor planning, bad luck - gone loco. And Rahul Dravid made tough runs. No need to stop the press.

Melbourne was supposed to have ironed out all the bad karma from England. Zaheer had turned up leaner and meaner. The second and third seamers were men of more than modest medium pace, and an eager rookie offspinner was champing at the bit. The batting was in the order it was meant to be in, and three Tests against West Indies had given everyone a good stretch.

India may still pick themselves up against Australia, but the bigger picture from the summer of 4-0 is still relevant. Against quality opposition in alien conditions, India's oldest hands are their most capable, but the company around them is thin. On rigorous tours, there still are three very vulnerable spots in the batting line-up. India's tried and tested "merry-go-round" approach to handling their fast bowling stocks, particularly injury management, needs rethinking and retooling.

Apart from than that single exchange-it-for-nothing, grin-generating trophy, in the last 12 months Indian cricket has also produced the possibility that our game could morph into two detached entities. Changes in personnel are inevitable, it is changes in performance that bring with them heavier impact.

The polite query thrown up by 2011 is whether being alert and responsive to Test results, particularly overseas, is a mission that actually matters to Indian cricket - to the players, to the selectors who scout them, to the administrators for whom success in any form is the only sign needed to show that all is swell on their watch. Indian cricket has internalised ODI cricket and will be formidable over the next decade. The short and shorter games are more lucrative than they have ever been. As a career option, it is a no-brainer compared to the prospect of an innings built on grafting for two sessions or bowling 20 overs over six hours. Two thousand and eleven gave India a World Cup of pure joy, but also established that the silent re-mapping of Indian cricket's DNA is now underway.

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