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Why is Bairstow sidelined for Chennai Tests, asks Hussain

January 24, 2021 11:58 IST

'It must be a nightmare for the selectors, but should you have your best side for that first India Test? If the next Test after this series was Brisbane in the Ashes, would we send our best side? So why when it's the first Test against India, one of the great sides, aren't we sending our best team?'

IMAGE: Former England captain Nasser Hussain is unhappy with England selectors for keeping Jonny Bairstow, considered a good player of spin, out of the first two Tests against India in Chennai next month. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

Former captain Nasser Hussain has questioned England's decision to rest Jonny Bairstow for the first two Tests against India next month, saying the batsman's spin proficiency was particularly needed at the start of the "iconic series".

As part of England's policy of resting multi-format players, Bairstow, along with Sam Curran and Mark Wood, will be cooling their heels after the ongoing Test series in Sri Lanka.

 

"I would say it's a concern that one of England's best three players of spin -- I would say Bairstow is alongside Joe Root and Ben Stokes in that -- has been given a boarding pass home and the others are going to Chennai," Hussain told Sky Sports Cricket.

"I'd have to rethink. It must be an absolute nightmare what the players have been through (during these COVID times). They had the whole of last summer and then had the IPL. Then it was South Africa, now Sri Lanka, then India and then IPL again. I get that and I am not downplaying it at all.

"Should you be resting or rotating for India or do you turn up to the first Test of that India series, an iconic series, and pick your best side? England fans switching on when it is turning and England are 20-2 may well have the argument, 'I want to see our best batsman against spin, or one of them, in Bairstow'."

Hussain was aware of the "nightmare" England players have gone through playing series in bio-secure bubbles since the COVID-19 pandemic struck in March last year.

“It must be a nightmare for the selectors, but should you have your best side for that first India Test? If the next Test after this series was Brisbane in the Ashes, would we send our best side? So why when it's the first Test against India, one of the great sides, aren't we sending our best team?

"It is that balancing act of being fair to the public and winning what's in front of you and long-term planning all year."

England have alternated veterans James Anderson and Stuart Broad in recent times but Hussain made a case for playing both the seamers who share 1100-plus Test wickets between them.

"So we are maybe going to leave out Anderson or Broad and play the spinner in Dom Bess. Do you think that is the right thing to do?

"At the moment our seamers are out-bowling our spinners, so shouldn't we show faith in them?"

The four-Test series begins on February 5 with Chennai hosting the first two matches while the last two will be played in Ahmedabad.

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