Tuesday 7th February 2012

Gavaskar slams India's rotation policy

Gavaskar slams India's rotation policy

Former captain Sunil Gavaskar on Tuesday slammed the proposed rotation of the top-order batsmen in the Indian team in the tri-series in Australia.

Gavaskar said that the move suggested that the players were unfit.

Opening batsman Virender Sehwag, on Tuesday, said in Perth ahead of India's match against Sri Lanka Wednesday, that either Gautam Gambhir or Sachin Tendulkar would be rested, but Gavaskar criticised the move and said that the best players should be fielded till the knock-out stage.

"The primary thing is to field a balanced team and to win matches. This business of rotation suggests that the players are unfit. The best team should be fielded even if a player has played eight matches successively. If all the players are fit, everybody should be in the mix," he said.

"If you are rotating the players, you are only resting the players but not thinking of winning matches. It brings to the fore that the players might be unfit or the question what the physiotherapist was doing," he added.

Gavaskar refused to buy the line that resting senior players would give a chance to the youngsters who could play for the country in the 2015 World Cup to be held in Australia.

"Then send back the senior players, why select them? If the senior players are selected they have to be picked. The best players should be on the park," he said.

Gavaskar felt that there was no reason to tinker with the order in the top three with Sehwag and Tendulkar as openers and Gambhir following them, which was the case in the World Cup-winning side.

"Why do we need to change the order of Sehwag, Tendulkar and Gambhir? That (order) won us the World Cup," he told a news channel.

Gavaskar said he would want three seamers and one spinner in Ravichandran Ashwin on the Perth wicket.

"I would prefer three seamers and Ravindra Jadeja bowling, besides Ashwin. Ashwin, though looked tired and jaded in the first match. But if he is fit he should be there in the team," said Gavaskar.

Talking about the BCCI-Sahara face-off, Gavaskar said that he and two of his former cricketer colleagues of the IPL Governing Council were never influenced on any decision when he was a member of the GC.”

"I, Ravi Shastri and the late (MAK) Pataudi spoke to all the franchises and gave our views. We were never told to do this and that," he said.

Gavaskar also said that he was not aware of any arm-twisting by a big franchisee to get former England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff in their team.


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