Has the balance shifted to the point that a keeper’s batting ability takes precedence over his glovework?

Alagappan Muthu21-Jan-2024Picture the worst-case scenario. India did when they went to South Africa last month. They knew they needed batting depth. But, like they do at home, they couldn’t rely on their spinners for it because the conditions in Centurion and Cape Town were designed to negate them. So they had no choice but to sacrifice one of them to bring in a fast bowler. To cope with that loss, they gambled with the wicketkeeper’s spot. The “u up?” text went to the better batter on offer.Now that India are back in more familiar surroundings, where R Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja have proven their worth as wicket-takers and run-makers, their needs are a little different. The “u up” text is likely to go to someone else.Does that mean KL Rahul’s place is under threat? Yeah. Well, sort of.Picture the worst-case scenario. England are baz-balling. Jonny Bairstow is running down the track with only one thing on his mind. But he misses the ball. Who do you want behind the stumps to take him out? A specialist or a part-ti–“See, I don’t think it’s right to call Rahul a part-time keeper,” Deep Dasgupta says. “He played the World Cup for India as a wicketkeeper. You need to have the skill to do that. The challenge for him is that he hasn’t done the job in first-class cricket, in Ranji trophy cricket where you spend 90 overs or maybe even longer on the field in the heat and everything. So for wicketkeepers, as much as it is a skill, it’s that repetition that is essential and you only get that by playing more matches. Because the skill is the same. It’s just catching the ball. But doing it for long periods of time is what matters.”Related

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Rahul has been the designated wicketkeeper for only three of his 92 first-class matches, and none of them were played in India.”On spinning pitches, against Ashwin and Jadeja, I don’t think KL has faced that before,” Dasgupta says. “I don’t want to say that conditions in South Africa were easier for him as a keeper. But it will be different in India. A keeper in India is in play for almost four or five balls of the over. And there are 90 overs in a day. You have to show the same concentration level that you had at the start, at the end. That only comes with practice.”Saba Karim, another former India gloveman, says Rahul is “in sync” with the demands of wicketkeeping and that India were wise to use him abroad where, “most of the time you keep wicket to the seamers and that is less strain on the mind and body. But I think for a home series, India will have to go back to a regular keeper.”