SPORTS

Is this underachievement?

By Faisal Shariff and Rajneesh Gupta
March 09, 2004

First, Sunil Gavaskar called the Indians a bunch of chokers; Imran Khan echoed this statement. Then Pakistan's Rashid Latif called them 'underachievers.' Such criticism for a team that drew a Test series in Australia, even going one-up in the series, a first for any team in Australia in more than a decade, and frightened the daylights out of the Kangaroos on home turf.

But it is also true that a team should benchmark itself not just against its lacklustre past but against others as well. So let us see where India stands in comparison with other countries, especially Australia.

First, a look at the performances of all Test teams since January 1, 2001:

Team Played Won Lost Drawn Winning %
Australia 38 26 7 5 68.42
England 40 15 16 9 37.50
India 35 12 11 12 34.29
New Zealand 22 7 4 11 31.82
Pakistan 26 15 8 3 57.69
South Africa 36 20 9 7 55.56
Sri Lanka 30 14 10 6 46.67
West Indies 37 9 18 10 24.32
Zimbabwe 24 5 15 4 17.39
Bangladesh 26 0 25 1 0
TOTAL 314 123 123 68

India has had the maximum number of draws and hence the dismal winning percentage of just 34.29% behind Australia, Pakistan, South Africa, Sri Lanka and England.

But of its 12 victories, five have come overseas and another two against Australia in India. In contrast, most of Sri Lanka's victories have come at home with a lone victory against Pakistan in Lahore in the final of the Asian Test Championship in 2002.

As many as eight of Pakistan's 15 victories have come against minnows Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.

In the same period, South Africa won seven Tests overseas -- two each against the West Indies, England, and Bangladesh and one against Zimbabwe.

New Zealand, the new powerhouse in world cricket, has had a single overseas Test win in the West Indies during this period.

Now, take a look at the performance of each team against Australia in Tests since January 1, 2001:

Team Played Won Lost Drawn Winning %
England 10 2 8 0 20.00
India 7 3 2 2 42.86
New Zealand 3 0 0 3 0
Pakistan 3 0 3 0 0
South Africa 6 1 5 0 16.67
Sri Lanka 0 - - - 0
West Indies 5 1 4 0 20.00
Zimbabwe 2 0 2 0 0
Bangladesh 2 0 2 0 0
TOTAL 38 7 26 5

Clearly, India is miles ahead of the rest of the pack. What's more, all the other teams that have won Tests against Australia did so only after the series had been decided -- the well-known dead-rubber syndrome. India, on the other hand, came back from a 0-1 deficit to win the home series 2-1 with successive victories in Kolkata and Chennai. And its third win came in Adelaide last December, putting India 1-0 up in the four-Test series Down Under.

Let us now turn our attention to One-Day Internationals.

First, a look at the performance of all teams in ODIs since January 1, 2001:

Team Played Won Lost NR Tied Winning %
Australia 97 76 18 2 1 78.35
Bangladesh 41 0 39 2 0 0
Canada 6 1 5 0 0 16.67
England 63 29 32 2 0 46.03
India 97 52 40 5 0 53.61
Kenya 30 5 24 1 0 16.67
Namibia 6 0 6 0 0 0.00
Netherlands 8 1 7 0 0 12.50
New Zealand 91 38 51 2 0 41.76
Pakistan 97 59 36 2 0 60.82
South Africa 90 56 30 2 2 62.22
Sri Lanka 94 51 40 2 1 54.26
West Indies 79 36 39 4 0 45.57
Zimbabwe 83 21 58 4 0 25.30
TOTAL 882 425 425 28 4

In terms of winning percentage, India is fifth in the list. But if you break down the wins into home and away, it shows up a startling fact.

It is conventional wisdom that winning abroad is the benchmark for quality. And after Australia, it is India that has the finest record with an away wins percentage of 56.5%.

Thus, though South Africa (62.22%), Pakistan (60.82%) and Sri Lanka (54.26%) are ahead of India (53.61%) overall, India comes out shining when you take a closer look at the home and away games records.

South Africa's away winning percentage is 55.91%, Sri Lanka's is 45.31%, and Pakistan's is 54.43%.

So can you really classify the Indians as underachievers?

Finally, a look at the performances against Australia in ODIs since January 1, 2001:

Team Played Won Lost NR Tied Winning %
Bangladesh 4 0 4 0 0 0.00
Canada 0 0 0 0 0 0
England 10 0 10 0 0 0.00
India 17 4 13 0 0 23.53
Kenya 3 0 3 0 0 0.00
Namibia 1 0 1 0 0 0.00
Netherlands 1 0 1 0 0 0.00
New Zealand 9 3 6 0 0 33.33
Pakistan 10 3 6 1 0 30.00
South Africa 11 2 8 0 1 18.18
Sri Lanka 9 3 6 0 0 33.33
West Indies 13 3 10 0 0 23.08
Zimbabwe 9 0 8 1 0 0.00
TOTAL 97 18 76 2 1

 

Faisal Shariff and Rajneesh Gupta

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