At Headingley, in the India vs England first Test, India’s innings collapsed not with a roar, but with a whisper, a familiar sound echoing once more from the lower order.
Despite strong foundations laid by the top and middle order, India’s tail failed to wag in either innings of the first Test against England, exposing a chronic vulnerability that the new regime under Gautam Gambhir has yet to resolve. For all the talk of a bold new era, this old flaw persists, and it may yet define the series.
The Numbers Tell the Tale
On a surface that flattened out over the first three days, India’s top five did their part. In the first innings, the visitors were 430/3 with Gill and Pant at the crease, a position of commanding strength. Yet the next seven wickets added a mere 41 runs. From 471 all out, the decline was swift and unsettling.
England’s response was telling. Their last six batters — often seen as the soft underbelly — counterpunched with 112 runs, dragging the team to within six of India’s total. The lesson was as sharp as it was simple: depth matters.
The pattern repeated in the second innings too. India, 333/4 and well on course for a target over 400, were dismissed for 364, a collapse of 6/31. Don’t get me wrong. England’s bowlers did well and deserve the credit, but India’s inability to utilize the advantage was equally culpable.
A Broader Trend, Not a One-Off
This is no statistical anomaly. Since the beginning of 2024, India’s batters from position No. 7 down have averaged just 17.87 — third worst among Test-playing nations, ahead of only Sri Lanka and Zimbabwe. This tail-end frailty becomes even more glaring when contrasted with the period from late 2021 to early 2024, when India averaged a respectable 21.32 under Rahul Dravid and batting coach Vikram Rathour.
Much has changed since. R. Ashwin, often bats well at the lower order, has retired. Also, the batting responsibilities have shifted to a younger, leaner group. This aggravated the already existing problem. India’s tail has become a liability at a time when England’s tail resembles a springboard.
The Coaching Shift
The Gambhir era has brought renewed energy into the team. Yet in terms of lower-order resilience, there has been regression. Under the now-departed Ryan ten Doeschate and assistant coach Abhishek Nayar, India’s tail lacked cohesion and preparation, a weakness laid bare in Australia and now brutally re-exposed at Leeds.
New batting coach Sitanshu Kotak inherits a dilemma: how to instill resistance where there is little precedent or habit. With Ravindra Jadeja now bearing much of the all-round burden, and none of the tailenders regularly contributing, the gap between India and England below No. 7 is as wide as it has been in recent years.
Bazball’s Blunt Message
England’s approach under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum has not only changed the tempo of Test cricket but also its architecture. Their lower order is built not to survive, but to strike — Ollie Robinson, Mark Wood, even James Anderson have the license to counterattack.
India’s tail, by contrast, remains tentative, defensive, and often static. It is not merely a tactical disadvantage but a philosophical one. The result: England score freely even at the end, while India flatlines.
India vs England: The Road Ahead
With four Tests to go in the India vs England series, the numbers may change, but the attitude must first. Whether through changes in personnel, preparation, or mindset, India must find a way to make the tail add rather than subtract. Because in this series, every run will count.
The challenge now facing Gambhir is not simply motivational or tactical. It is structural.
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