The fallout from India’s humiliating 93 all out at Eden Gardens continues to reverberate through the cricketing world. This time, it’s a stinging rebuke from the man who defined Indian batting for a generation. Sunil Gavaskar, the original ‘Little Master,’ has pinpointed the root cause of the team’s fragility: a deep and growing domestic cricket neglect that has left the current crop of batters unprepared for the true test of character that is Test match cricket.
In a direct and unambiguous warning to new head coach Gautam Gambhir, Gavaskar stated, “Our players don’t play domestic cricket” . His message is clear: without the crucible of the Ranji Trophy—the tournament that for decades forged India’s best—the national team is vulnerable. This structural weakness, he argues, was brutally exposed by South Africa’s spinners on a surface that offered genuine challenge, a challenge the Indian batters were ill-equipped to handle.
Gavaskar’s central thesis is not new, but it has never been more relevant. He contends that the Ranji Trophy is not just a tournament; it’s an essential training ground. It teaches batters how to occupy the crease for long periods, how to read different types of wickets over multiple days, and crucially, how to build mental resilience in high-pressure situations without the safety net of a global audience or massive contracts .
When top players are routinely rested from the Ranji Trophy to manage their workloads or prepare for white-ball assignments, they miss out on this vital development. The result, as seen in Kolkata, is a batting lineup that crumbles under the slightest pressure, lacking the grit and technique needed to grind out an innings on a difficult surface. This domestic cricket neglect has created a generation of batters who are brilliant in controlled environments but fragile in adversity.
The issue goes beyond individual player choices. It’s a systemic problem driven by several factors:
This ecosystem has devalued the very tournament that once was the backbone of Indian Test cricket.
The first Test against South Africa was a perfect storm that exposed this vulnerability. The pitch offered turn from day one, and South Africa’s spinners, Keshav Maharaj and Aiden Markram, exploited it with discipline. A team hardened by Ranji Trophy battles would have found a way to survive, to build partnerships, and to fight another day.
Instead, India’s batters looked tentative, playing low-percentage shots and showing a clear lack of a coherent game plan. Their technique against quality spin in challenging conditions was found wanting—a direct consequence, Gavaskar argues, of not having to face similar scenarios in a competitive, multi-day domestic setting.
It’s important to acknowledge the other side of the argument. Team management, including head coach Gautam Gambhir, operates in an era where the cricket calendar is packed to breaking point. The philosophy has shifted towards preserving players for the most important matches—primarily international fixtures and the IPL.
They believe that modern training methods, A tours, and white-ball cricket provide sufficient preparation. However, as Gavaskar’s critique implies, this approach may be creating a false sense of readiness. There is no substitute for the unique pressure and challenge of a four-day Ranji Trophy knockout match.
Compounding the issue is the injury to captain Shubman Gill . His absence for the crucial second Test in Guwahati is a massive blow, but it also highlights another risk of the current system. If key players aren’t being tested and hardened in domestic cricket, are they truly as match-fit for the specific demands of Test cricket as they could be? The line between smart rest and detrimental inactivity is becoming dangerously thin.
Gautam Gambhir, a fierce competitor in his own playing days, now faces his biggest challenge as a coach. He must navigate the tension between the short-term demands of an international schedule and the long-term health of the team’s batting culture. Gavaskar’s comments are a direct challenge to his leadership: will he find a way to re-integrate the value of domestic cricket into the team’s preparation, or will he continue down the current path at the risk of further collapses?
Sunil Gavaskar’s warning about domestic cricket neglect is a desperately needed wake-up call. The glitz of the IPL and the intensity of international cricket cannot replace the foundational role of tournaments like the Ranji Trophy. If India is to rediscover its lost aura at home and become a truly dominant Test side again, it must rebuild its connection to its domestic roots. The talent is there. What’s missing is the forge in which that talent is tempered.
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