Pujara: ‘Something Is Wrong’ With India’s Home Test Loss
The sting of India’s humiliating 93 all out at Eden Gardens hasn’t just left fans reeling—it’s drawn an uncharacteristically blunt, almost angry, statement from one of the game’s most composed veterans. Cheteshwar Pujara, a man known for his stoic silence and relentless grit, has broken his calm to deliver a powerful message: “Something is wrong.”
In the aftermath of the India home Test loss to South Africa, a common narrative began to emerge—that this young Indian team is in a ‘transition phase,’ and such setbacks are to be expected. Pujara has categorically shut that down. His point is simple, yet devastating: when your squad includes proven, world-class batters like Yashasvi Jaiswal and Shubman Gill, there is no valid excuse for a batting performance so abject on home soil .
Table of Contents
- Pujara’s No-Nonsense Message
- Why the ‘Transition’ Excuse Doesn’t Fly
- The Eden Gardens Collapse: A Symptom, Not an Accident
- What Could Be Wrong? A Deeper Dive
- The Legacy of Indian Home Dominance
- Pujara’s Words: A Wake-Up Call
- Conclusion: Beyond Excuses
- Sources
Pujara’s No-Nonsense Message
Pujara’s comments cut through the usual post-defeat platitudes. He refused to hide behind the convenient label of a ‘young team finding its feet.’ Speaking with the authority of a man who has been the bedrock of India’s batting for over a decade, he stated that the presence of elite talent in the current lineup makes the collapse inexcusable .
“We have players who have performed in the IPL, in domestic cricket, and even on overseas tours,” Pujara’s logic implies. “You cannot call a team with Jaiswal, who has an overseas Test century, and Gill, a proven top-order run-scorer, a ‘work in progress.’ They are established international players. So, when they fail collectively in such a dramatic fashion at home, it signals that the problem is not their inexperience, but something far more fundamental within the system .”
Why the ‘Transition’ Excuse Doesn’t Fly
The idea of a ‘transition phase’ is a well-worn crutch for teams in flux. However, in the current context, it’s a misnomer. Consider the core of India’s batting:
- Yashasvi Jaiswal: Scored a magnificent 179 in Perth during India’s 2024-25 tour of Australia, proving he can handle the best pace attacks in the world.
- Shubman Gill: A mainstay at the top of the order with centuries in multiple countries and a mountain of runs in white-ball cricket.
- Ruturaj Gaikwad: A consistent performer in domestic and T20 cricket, now a regular in the Test side.
This is not a team of raw rookies. This is a team with a spine of proven, high-quality batters. To blame a 93 all out on ‘transition’ is, in Pujara’s view, an act of intellectual dishonesty that prevents the team from addressing the real issues.
The Eden Gardens Collapse: A Symptom, Not an Accident
The loss to South Africa wasn’t just a bad day at the office. It was a complete systemic failure. South Africa’s spinners, Keshav Maharaj and Aiden Markram, were brilliant, no doubt. But a genuine cricketing side, especially at home, finds a way to counter-attack, to build partnerships, and to show resilience.
Instead, India’s batting displayed a startling lack of application and a clear absence of a coherent game plan. The innings was a series of individuals playing disconnected, low-percentage shots, leading to a rapid and embarrassing implosion. Pujara, the master of occupation, would see this as a direct result of a flawed batting philosophy that prioritizes aggression over substance in all conditions .
What Could Be Wrong? A Deeper Dive
Pujara’s cryptic “something is wrong” likely points to several interconnected issues:
- Selection Inconsistency: As highlighted by other former players like Mohammad Kaif, the constant chopping and changing of the playing XI, with players like Sarfaraz Khan and Sai Sudharsan in and out, creates an atmosphere of fear and insecurity, not confidence .
- Lack of a Clear Batting Identity: Is the team’s primary goal to play fast-paced, positive cricket at all costs, or to adapt to the conditions and build a solid platform? The current approach seems to be the former, even when it’s not suited to the pitch or situation.
- Technical Deficiencies Against Quality Spin: While India has dominated with its own spinners at home, its batters seem increasingly vulnerable to high-quality, well-directed spin, a worrying trend for a team that plays half its cricket on turning tracks.
The Legacy of Indian Home Dominance
For over a decade, India was virtually unbeatable at home in Test cricket. The fortress of Eden Gardens, Chepauk, and other venues was built on the back of a rock-solid batting lineup that could absorb pressure and grind opponents into the dust. Pujara was a central figure in that era.
The current India home Test loss feels like a betrayal of that legacy. It’s not just about losing a single match; it’s about the erosion of the very qualities—patience, technique, and mental fortitude—that made India so formidable in its own backyard. Pujara’s frustration stems from seeing that legacy being dismantled.
Pujara’s Words: A Wake-Up Call
Coming from a player of Pujara’s stature, this is not mere criticism; it’s a clarion call for introspection. His words carry immense weight because he has been the ultimate team man, never one to publicly air grievances. His decision to speak out now, so forcefully, underscores the severity of the crisis he perceives.
He is challenging the team management, the selectors, and the players themselves to look beyond easy excuses and confront the uncomfortable truths about their current direction and mindset.
Conclusion: Beyond Excuses
Cheteshwar Pujara’s blunt message after the India home Test loss is a much-needed reality check. The era of hiding behind the ‘transition’ label is over. With a squad full of genuine talent, the onus is on the system to provide stability, a clear strategy, and an environment that fosters resilience over reckless aggression. Pujara’s warning is clear: until they figure out what that ‘something’ is that’s gone wrong, more humiliations like the one at Eden Gardens are not just possible—they are probable.
Sources
- Times of India: “‘Something is wrong’: Pujara’s blunt message after India’s Eden humiliation” [[3], [5]]
- Match report and analysis of India’s batting collapse in the first Test vs South Africa from ESPNcricinfo
- Comments from Mohammad Kaif on team management and selection issues
- Player statistics and records for Yashasvi Jaiswal, Shubman Gill, and Ruturaj Gaikwad from the ICC and domestic cricket archives.