TBF, I think even if we do that, over 4 tests or so, our team will win or at least draw the series. A side nicking a test in a 2 test series and drawing the other one seems more likely.the most probable cause is if/when india get too cute and continue to produce decks where random batsmen are as useful as ashwin/jadeja with the ball.
i think it will be australia or england because they tour india the most, giving them the best look at conditions over the span of careers.
Australia and England also have the financial and institutional resources to spend months if not years preparing the side for the conditions with A tours, preparatory camps in the subcontinent, national training centres where they could put in dustbowl pitches, all the video and data analysis money can buy etc etc.the most probable cause is if/when india get too cute and continue to produce decks where random batsmen are as useful as ashwin/jadeja with the ball.
i think it will be australia or england because they tour india the most, giving them the best look at conditions over the span of careers.
England had a good team in 2012 with players who had experienced indian cinditions in 2006 and 2008 but they were also a bit lucky. They caught India when they were clearly in a transition phase and their most potent bowler at the time got injured after the first test.Australia and England also have the financial and institutional resources to spend months if not years preparing the side for the conditions with A tours, preparatory camps in the subcontinent, national training centres where they could put in dustbowl pitches, all the video and data analysis money can buy etc etc.
England wouldn't have won in 2012 and we wouldn't have gotten as close as we did in 2017 without extensive preparation - preparation that, unfortunately, isn't particularly accessible for most Test nations.
I'm always a bit confused when someone replies with something like this, as if luck is some mystical, legendary force from the distant past that surely will no longer apply in the future.England had a good team in 2012 with players who had experienced indian cinditions in 2006 and 2008 but they were also a bit lucky. They caught India when they were clearly in a transition phase and their most potent bowler at the time got injured after the first test.
Williamson's record in India is pretty mediocre. He probably doesn't even make the side, let alone captaining it.World XI to play in India:
Karunaratne
Latham
Williamson (c)
Smith
Root
Rizwan (wk)
Stokes
Cummins
Wagner
Yasir Shah
Lyon
Or possibly drop Cummins for Babar Azam and stack the batting, although I don't know how Stokes would feel about batting at 8.
Yeah but he's a quality player of spin and clearly edges Smith as the best batsman in the world at the moment.Williamson's record in India is pretty mediocre. He probably doesn't even make the side, let alone captaining it.
"Clearly"? No.Yeah but he's a quality player of spin and clearly edges Smith as the best batsman in the world at the moment.
No my point is India lose rarely at home. To beat them You have either gotta be an exceptional side like Australia 2004, windies 83 or an experienced, decent side facing off an Indian side with issues e.g. England 84, 2012, rsa 2000.I'm always a bit confused when someone replies with something like this, as if luck is some mystical, legendary force from the distant past that surely will no longer apply in the future.