Indian selectors need vision and guts, says Vengsarkar

Without the experience of Rahul Dravid, Vangipurappu Laxman  and Yuvraj Singh through injury, India struggled to cope with  Dale Steyn’s express pace and movement and lost in under four  days.

“The selectors need to look at grooming players,” former  test captain Vengsarkar told Reuters yesterday, after the  innings-and-six-run defeat.

Dravid, Laxman, master batsman Sachin Tendulkar and the  retired Saurav Ganguly contributed more than 38,000 runs as they  formed India’s middle order for a decade.

Yuvraj has succeeded Ganguly at six in the order, having  proved himself in the one-day game, but other replacements have  yet to be found.

“That’s three big (pairs of) boots to fill in the future,”  said Vengsarkar, who as a former chief selector was instrumental  in India’s rise to the number one ranking.

“For that the selectors need to have a vision, foresight and  guts.”

Wriddhiman Saha struggled in the middle order during the  first test, contributing 36 runs after being given an unexpected  debut when Rohit Sharma, called up as cover for Laxman,  sustained an injury just before the match.

THE WALL

Subramaniam Badrinath, however, showed promising signs by  scoring a first-innings fifty but he has some way to go to fill  the boots of his illustrious predecessors.

Saha has lost his place in the squad for the second test,  which starts in Kolkata on Sunday, and Dravid and Yuvraj are  ruled out, though Laxman is expected to be fit.