India just swept South Africa in the white-ball leg of their tour—yet one of the nation’s most respected voices is sounding the alarm. Former Test batter and astute commentator Sanjay Manjrekar has issued a stark warning: all the T20 glitz and ODI fireworks won’t mask a deeper, more dangerous truth. Test cricket, he insists, is the real pulse of a cricketing nation—and by that measure, India is running a high fever.
Following a humiliating 0-2 defeat in the Test cricket series in South Africa, Manjrekar didn’t mince words. “Results in white-ball cricket are flashy, but Tests reveal the real health of a nation,” he said in a recent analysis piece . “And right now, India’s red-ball batting is showing serious symptoms of weakness.”
India’s recent dominance in limited-overs formats—especially in high-profile series wins—has created a comforting narrative. Fans celebrate Hardik Pandya’s tactical masterclasses and the IPL’s global spectacle, but Manjrekar argues this has led to a dangerous complacency.
“We’re mistaking entertainment for excellence,” he cautioned. “Winning a T20 series against South Africa doesn’t prepare you for the relentless pressure of 90 overs a day on a seaming Cape Town pitch.” The disconnect between formats is real: the skills, temperament, and technical discipline required in Test cricket are increasingly rare in an era obsessed with strike rates and six-hitting.
For purists and planners alike, Test cricket is the gold standard. It’s where legends are forged—not in 20-over cameos, but in multi-day battles of patience, technique, and mental fortitude. Manjrekar points to India’s past greats—Dravid, Tendulkar, Laxman—who built their reputations on overseas Test centuries against top-tier pace and spin.
Today’s Indian batting unit, by contrast, collapsed against disciplined South African seamers like Kagiso Rabada and Keshav Maharaj. The average team score across four innings? Just 168. That’s not just a loss—it’s a systemic failure.
Several red flags emerged during the series:
This wasn’t just about bad luck—it was a reflection of inadequate preparation and selection philosophy.
Manjrekar’s biggest concern lies in the domestic ecosystem. With the IPL consuming the calendar and Ranji Trophy matches often under-scheduled or under-attended, young talent is being funneled almost exclusively into white-ball cricket.
“How can we expect batters to succeed in Test cricket if they haven’t played more than five first-class games a year?” he asked. Compare that to Australia or England, where domestic red-ball tournaments remain fiercely competitive and well-resourced .
Even India’s A tours—the traditional breeding ground for future Test stars—have been scaled back. The result? A generation of batters who can clear midwicket but can’t survive a 30-over opening spell in Johannesburg.
While India chases franchise dollars, others are doubling down on the longest format. New Zealand recently overhauled their domestic structure to prioritize red-ball skills. England’s “Bazball” revolution, while aggressive, is still rooted in solid Test fundamentals and first-class investment .
Even South Africa—despite financial challenges—ensures their top players participate in the CSA Four-Day Series. They understand: Test cricket isn’t just tradition; it’s the bedrock of national identity in international sport.
Sanjay Manjrekar isn’t trying to diminish India’s white-ball achievements. He’s urging the cricket board, selectors, and fans to stop pretending that T20 trophies equate to cricketing greatness. The 0-2 whitewash in South Africa isn’t an anomaly—it’s a symptom.
If India wants to be a truly great cricketing nation, it must recommit to Test cricket. That means scheduling more first-class games, investing in pitch variety at home, and selecting players based on red-ball merit—not just IPL price tags. As Manjrekar so bluntly put it: “The mirror is held up. It’s time to look.”
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