UPDATE ON : January 08, 2023 , By Kannan Nair User Image

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Category : Indian team

Shreyas Iyer: India’s Spiderman against the spinning web

Mumbai has been a known manufacturing plant for batters who more often than not go on to represent India. The list keeps on increasing year after year, and for the past two years or so, one batter who has outperformed not just the blokes of Mumbai but the international stars in the Indian dugout has been Shreyas Iyer. The prolific Mumbai-born batter has been nothing short of magical in the past two years for India in all formats.

28-year-old Shreyas Iyer, who was being looked at as the next potential skipper during 2019/20, slipped out of contention owing to injuries thereafter. Ever since his comeback, Iyer has been probably the best red-ball batter for India on subcontinental pitches, which turn and bounce like a superball. Shreyas, who was previously regarded as a white-ball player, wowed everyone with his supremacy and dominance in red-ball cricket. The right-handed batter made his India debut in 2017 in the ODI setup, and it took 5 long years for Shreyas to power his way from the colourful blue India jersey to the India whites (Test matches). Shreyas has played seven international test matches, totaling 12 innings, since 2021, and boy! He has donned the white jersey with the outmost pride, scoring 624 runs at an unbelievable average of 56.73. In these 12 innings, Shreyas has scored one century and five fifties, with three of them being 80+ scores (92, 86, and 87).

 

Shreyas and runs against spinners: A better love story than Twilight?

Indian batters were historically known as the best players when the ball was turning like an F1 race car drifting on a sharp turn. In the recent 10 years, the batting average of the top 5 batters has dropped drastically against spinners, and they have been found wanting for answers against spin bowlers. Gone are the days when Indian batters faced spinners blindfolded on any track. Among the Indian cricketers with more than 10 innings, only Shreyas Iyer and Rishabh Pant have an average of more than 60 against spinners. Out of the total 624 test runs Iyer has scored, 65.2% (407) have come against spin bowling.

India's struggle to find a calm and composed batter in the middle is analogous to the Fab Four of India’s great batters between 2000 and 2011. And Shreyas Iyer has been the batter in the lineup who can dominate any spinner with the flick of his wrist (will).Of course, thanks to the batter’s great use of the wrist and soft hands against the spinners, the most impressive Shreyas' innings in test cricket came in the first quarter of 2022, when he belted the nation with one of the best spin bowling attacks against Sri Lanka on a rank turner in M. Chinnaswamy Stadium. India were 4-86 when Iyer went to bat on the first day’s play. From there on, Iyer accumulated 92 runs, scoring 36.51% of the team's total runs (252) in that inning. What impressed one and all was the manner in which Iyer tackled the spinners. While the other batters had thrown in the towel, Iyer nonchalantly attacked the spinners, putting his dancing shoes on every time the Sri Lankan spinners tried to attack him with fielders around the bat. When the bowlers are weaving their web of spin, India’s very own Spiderman “Iyer” comes down the track and hammers the web of spin all over the park.

Iyer’s ability to use his feet made the Lankan spinners drop short, and the rock-solid Iyer used his height to great effect, going back deep in his crease and clobbering the short deliveries over mid-wicket for boundaries. Even in the second innings, Iyer outbatted the rest of the Indian batters, scoring 22.11% of the team's total runs (67), assisting India in posting a winning total of 303 and setting Sri Lanka a steep target of 447 to chase on a deadly spinning track. This was more of a counterattacking innings where the Sri Lankan left-arm spinners were bowling with a negative line from over the wicket, targeting the far outside leg stump. Iyer’s quick use of the feet and charismatic wrist work against the spinners on a pitch that generates turn and bounce. Iyer’s top score was in both innings of the test match, where spinners took 26 (66.7%) of the total 39 wickets, which proves the stature and brilliance of Shreyas Iyer against spinners.

 

in the recently concluded two-match test series against Bangladesh in Bangladesh. He scored 202 runs in three innings, and while eyebrows were raised over the Man of the Series award being given to Ceteshwar Pujara over Shreyas, the tall, right-handed batter won the hearts of every Indian fan more with the composure of his batting under pressure than anything else. Iyer scored crucial 29 runs remaining not out when India was in trouble. Shreyas' sensible and calm batting in the match winning partnership with R Ashwin took India home in the tense second Test in Mirpur, where India was staring at defeat at 74/7 while chasing 145. Iyer’s presence in the middle sent a sense of calm among the dressing room, and KL Rahul echoed the same during the post-match conference (we can put KL’s statement here). Iyers' ability to drop the wrist on turning tracks with high bounce reminds us all of our hero from the 1960s, M L Jaisimha (we can put that tweet here).

 

Crunching the numbers
If we look at the numbers, India's top five test batters in order of runs scored from 2021 to 2022 (January 1, 2021, to December 31, 2022) have been Rishabh Pant (1, 424), Cheteshwar Pujara (1, 111), Rohit Sharma (996), Virat Kohli (801), and Shubhman Gill (656). Shreyas Iyer, who ranks 7th, has played the least number of innings (12) among all the top 10 batters and has the best average (56.73), with the next-best being Rishabh Pant's (47.47). Decoding India's performance against spin bowlers with the red ball, Iyer has only been dismissed six times while scoring 407 runs in just ten innings against spin bowlers, with the best average (67.83) against spin bowlers.

The second-best again is Rishabh, who has been known to take the spinners to the cleaners with all his might, scoring 732 runs in 22 innings while also being dismissed on 12 occasions by the spinners in the process. Notably, Iyer has the best average against spinners. He also dominates the spinners with a healthy strike rate of 64.6 in Test cricket, only second to Rishabh Pant's (97.21). The only other Indian batter who has been dismissed the least by a spinner in test cricket between 2021 and 2022 with more than 10 innings is Ravindra Jadeja (2), with a staggering average of 98.50 against spinners in the said period.

SR.NO

Player

I

R

B

Outs

Avg

 

SR

1

RR Pant

22

732

753

12

61

 

97.21

2

CA Pujara

24

473

985

11

43

 

48.02

3

SS Iyer

10

407

630

6

67.83

 

64.6

4

RG Sharma

15

322

562

7

46

 

57.3

5

V Kohli

21

307

675

12

25.58

 

45.48

 

What awaits Iyer with WTC and WC 2023 in his peripheral vision?

The stylish Mumbai batsman has been in brilliant form in ODI cricket in 2022, with successful outings against the West Indies, New Zealand, and the recent tour of Bangladesh. Against the West Indies, Iyer scored three fifties in four innings (1 at home, 2 away) and helped India sail over the victory line. Iyer then stunned everyone with his consistent performance against South Africa at home, where he scored one century and one fifty in the three-match series (50, 113*, and 28*). In fact, Iyer was dismissed only once in that series. Iyer continued his purple patch against the Kiwis too, scoring 80 in the first and 49 in the third ODI. while he added 109 more runs in the three-match series in Bangladesh, including 82 in the second ODI. The most important part of all the crucial Iyer innings in ODIs has been the time when he has come onto bat. India is over and out, with the big guns back in the pavilion inside 20 overs. Iyer has since come in and played a modern-day sheet anchor role, not only playing full innings but also tonking the bowlers as needed to increase the scoring rate.2022 has been the year of Shreyas Iyer, as he has scored 724 runs in 15 innings, belting bowlers across the park with an average of 55.69 and a healthy strike rate of 91.53.

 

Most of his big scores have come at either number 3 or 4, and with Virat Kohli being the undisputed first-choice number 3, Iyer has a great opportunity to grab the number 4 spot in ODIs. The stakes are high for the number four position since India has struggled to find the perfect batter for that position in the recent past, with the likes of KL Rahul, Ambati Rayudu, and Rishabh Pant, among others, all failing to make it their own. He has been one of the most consistent batsmen in the Indian team in ODIs over the last 12 months, outscoring all the other Indian batters with 724 runs, consisting of six fifty-plus scores and one hundred. with the next best being Dhawan, with 688 runs in 7 more innings than Iyer. On the back of this purple year, the Mumbai Southpaw also jumped from 34th place in the ICC ODI rankings for batters to 15th place.

It's no secret that Shreyas Iyer struggles against the short ball. His vulnerability to the short ball is usually brought to the fore in the longest format of the game, especially in pace-friendly conditions. Though Iyer might already know that his shortcoming when the ball is short requires improvement and might already be working on it with the batting coach, But with India hosting the ODI World Cup, the threat of short-pitch bowling is snuffed out thanks to the slower and lower wickets in the sub-continent.

 

 

 

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