Patience is a virtue: Ashwin willing to be ‘boring’ in return for success
Off-spinner knows conditions in West Indies will require him to ‘plug away all day long’
NEW DELHI:
The slowness of the tracks in West Indies has convinced India off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin that the only way to succeed in the four-Test series is by being “as boring as possible”.
The 29-year-old will spearhead a relatively young Indian attack which also includes leg-spinner Amit Mishra and spinning all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja.
“From whatever I saw in the last game, the wickets are pretty slow,” Ashwin told the Indian cricket board website. “I will have to be prepared for a long haul and try and be as boring as possible, in terms of trying to plug away all day long.”
Ramdin out of Test squad against India
However, India’s main spinner said the spinners can be deadly if conditions suit them. “If the wickets are going to be tailor-made for us and starts spinning, we’d come into our own,” he said. “It’s all about patience.”
India play a second tour match in St Kitts before moving to Antigua for the first Test from next Thursday, while Jamaica, Gros Islet and Trinidad host the subsequent matches.
Ashwin, who was part of the Indian team that won a tri-nation series in the Caribbean in 2013, does not expect much assistance from any of the surfaces, at least not until it wears down over the Test.
“The first couple of days, probably even three days of the Test match, there’s not going to be a lot in it for the spinners,” said Ashwin, who has played 32 tests for India, taking 176 wickets. “There might be a little bit of bounce or little bit of slowness in the wicket that you can exploit, but it’s got to be pretty boring lines and lengths and keep teasing with your flight. We’re pretty much ready for it.”
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Ashwin takes “a lot of pride” in being the leader of the pack and said he has learnt quite a lot since former spinner Anil Kumble took over as the new India coach last month. “He has brought in a lot of energy and meticulousness,” said Ashwin.
The former India captain begins his year-long tenure with the West Indies tour but Kumble is already being endorsed by Ashwin. “He has already started bowling in the nets, which is something I pick out notes from,” said the off-spinner. “So far, he has provided me with a lot of confidence and a lot of responsibility. It’s been more of giving me the license to try and express myself, which is something I really relish.”
Published in The Express Tribune, July 15th, 2016.
The slowness of the tracks in West Indies has convinced India off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin that the only way to succeed in the four-Test series is by being “as boring as possible”.
The 29-year-old will spearhead a relatively young Indian attack which also includes leg-spinner Amit Mishra and spinning all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja.
“From whatever I saw in the last game, the wickets are pretty slow,” Ashwin told the Indian cricket board website. “I will have to be prepared for a long haul and try and be as boring as possible, in terms of trying to plug away all day long.”
Ramdin out of Test squad against India
However, India’s main spinner said the spinners can be deadly if conditions suit them. “If the wickets are going to be tailor-made for us and starts spinning, we’d come into our own,” he said. “It’s all about patience.”
India play a second tour match in St Kitts before moving to Antigua for the first Test from next Thursday, while Jamaica, Gros Islet and Trinidad host the subsequent matches.
Ashwin, who was part of the Indian team that won a tri-nation series in the Caribbean in 2013, does not expect much assistance from any of the surfaces, at least not until it wears down over the Test.
“The first couple of days, probably even three days of the Test match, there’s not going to be a lot in it for the spinners,” said Ashwin, who has played 32 tests for India, taking 176 wickets. “There might be a little bit of bounce or little bit of slowness in the wicket that you can exploit, but it’s got to be pretty boring lines and lengths and keep teasing with your flight. We’re pretty much ready for it.”
Pakistan, West Indies set for day-night Test
Ashwin takes “a lot of pride” in being the leader of the pack and said he has learnt quite a lot since former spinner Anil Kumble took over as the new India coach last month. “He has brought in a lot of energy and meticulousness,” said Ashwin.
The former India captain begins his year-long tenure with the West Indies tour but Kumble is already being endorsed by Ashwin. “He has already started bowling in the nets, which is something I pick out notes from,” said the off-spinner. “So far, he has provided me with a lot of confidence and a lot of responsibility. It’s been more of giving me the license to try and express myself, which is something I really relish.”
Published in The Express Tribune, July 15th, 2016.