After India’s humiliating three-day Test collapse against South Africa at Eden Gardens, the cricketing world isn’t just questioning the pitch—it’s questioning the very foundation of Indian batting. And no voice has been more incisive than that of former Test batter and respected commentator Sanjay Manjrekar. In a brutally honest assessment, he declared: “Defence has become the last priority” for modern Indian batters—a statement that cuts to the heart of India’s Test batting crisis .
India’s 30-run loss wasn’t just about a turning pitch or poor shot selection. It was the inevitable result of a deeper, systemic flaw: the inability to play long innings under pressure. Batters like Virat Kohli and Shreyas Iyer—normally rock-solid—were dismissed playing expansive drives to good-length balls that kept low or spun sharply .
But as Manjrekar points out, you can’t blame the pitch alone when your top order averages under 25 in home Tests over the past 12 months. The problem isn’t the surface—it’s the skill set of the players facing it.
In a candid post-match analysis, Manjrekar didn’t hold back: “Today’s players are trained to score, not to survive. Defence is the last thing on their mind. They see a ball on off-stump and think, ‘Can I hit this?’—not ‘Can I leave this?’” .
He attributes this shift to the overwhelming dominance of white-ball cricket, especially franchise T20 leagues like the IPL, where aggression is rewarded and patience is penalized. “Test cricket has become the least favoured format in a player’s calendar,” he added. “Why would they invest in a skill that doesn’t get them contracts or fame?”
The data backs Manjrekar’s argument. Consider these trends:
This has created a generation of batters who thrive in chaos but crumble under sustained pressure—a fatal flaw in Test cricket.
Manjrekar’s proposed solution is radical: India should prepare more English-style pitches—green, seaming tracks that reward line, length, and patience over the first three days before offering spin later.
“If you give batters a surface where they have to play straight, leave well, and value their wicket, they’ll relearn those skills,” he argues. “You can’t teach defence on a pitch that turns square from ball one. It’s impossible.”
This approach would also better prepare India for overseas tours, where seaming conditions in England, Australia, and South Africa have repeatedly exposed their technical fragility—a key insight from our [INTERNAL_LINK:International] series on India’s away record.
It’s not impossible—but it requires structural change:
Players like Yashasvi Jaiswal and Dhruv Jurel show promise, but without systemic support, their natural talent may succumb to the same T20 conditioning.
India sits at a crossroads. They can continue banking on extreme turners for short-term home wins—while watching their batting crumble under pressure. Or, they can heed Manjrekar’s warning and invest in a sustainable Test culture that values resilience as much as runs.
As the World Test Championship cycle intensifies, and away series become more critical, the cost of neglecting defensive technique will only grow. The Eden Gardens loss may be a painful wake-up call—but it could also be the catalyst for renewal.
Sanjay Manjrekar’s warning about India’s Test batting crisis is not just about one match—it’s a plea for the soul of red-ball cricket. In an era where every ball must be attacked, the art of defense is vanishing. If India wants to remain a true Test powerhouse, not just a home bully, it must rediscover the discipline, patience, and respect for the game that once defined its greatest batters. The pitch isn’t the problem; the mindset is.
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